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EDITORS

Annie E. Coombes teaches museum studies and art and cultural history at Birkbeck, University of London. She is Director of the Peltz Gallery and author of award‐winning books on museums, memorialization, and the legacy of colonialism including Reinventing Africa: Museums, Material Culture and Popular Imagination in Late Victorian and Edwardian England (Yale University Press, 1994); History After Apartheid: Visual Culture and Public Memory in a Democratic South Africa (Duke University Press, 2003); and Managing Heritage, Making Peace: History, Identity and Memory in Contemporary Kenya (with L. Hughes and Karega‐Munene; I. B. Tauris, 2013). She has also edited the collection Rethinking Settler Colonialism: History and Memory in Australia, Canada, Aotearoa New Zealand and South Africa (Manchester University Press, 2006).

Professor Annie E. Coombes Professor of Material and Visual Culture

Department of History of Art Birkbeck, University of London

London, UK

Ruth B. Phillips teaches in the graduate program in Cultural Mediations at Carleton University and is a former director of the University of British Columbia Museum of Anthropology. Her research and publications span African art, indigenous North American art and critical museology, and include Representing Woman: Sande Society Masquerades of the Mende of Sierra Leone (Fowler Museum of Cultural History, 1995); Trading Identities: The Souvenir in Native North American Art from the Northeast, 1700‐1900 (University of Washington Press, 1998); Museum Pieces: Toward the Indigenization of Canadian Museums (McGill Queen’s University Press, 2011); and, with Janet Catherine Berlo, Native North American Art (Oxford University Press, revised edition, 2014). She is a fellow of the Royal Society of Canada.

Professor Ruth B. Phillips Canada Research Professor and

Professor of Art History Institute for Comparative Studies in Literature, Art, and Culture

Carleton University Ottawa, ON, Canada

Museum Transformations

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