Zbyněk Zbyslav Stránský
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Zbyněk Zbyslav Stránský (26 October 1926 – 21 January 2016) was a Czech
museologist Museology or museum studies is the study of museums. It explores the history of museums and their role in society, as well as the activities they engage in, including curating, preservation, public programming, and education. Terminology The w ...
, considered the “father of scientific museology”. Between the years 1960 and 1970, he was responsible for one of the first attempts to structure a theoretical basis for museology, when directing the Department of Museology of the
Moravian Museum Moravian is the adjective form of the Czech Republic region of Moravia, and refers to people of ancestry from Moravia. Moravian may also refer to: * a member or adherent of the Moravian Church, one of the oldest Protestant denominations * Moravia ...
, in
Brno Brno ( , ; german: Brünn ) is a city in the South Moravian Region of the Czech Republic. Located at the confluence of the Svitava and Svratka rivers, Brno has about 380,000 inhabitants, making it the second-largest city in the Czech Republic ...
. With the support of the museum director, Jan Jelínek, he founded a School of museological thinking in Brno, aiming to connect museum practice to a specific theoretical system. Zbyněk Z. Stránský, as he used to sign his texts, was the pioneer in the construction of a museology that is conceived as
social science Social science is one of the branches of science, devoted to the study of societies and the relationships among individuals within those societies. The term was formerly used to refer to the field of sociology, the original "science of soc ...
, creating an autonomous system of thought based on specific concepts.


Biography

Born in
Kutná Hora Kutná Hora (; medieval Czech: ''Hory Kutné''; german: Kuttenberg) is a town in the Central Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 20,000 inhabitants. The centre of Kutná Hora, including the Sedlec Abbey and its ossuary, was designa ...
, the old
Czechoslovakia , rue, Чеськословеньско, , yi, טשעכאסלאוואקיי, , common_name = Czechoslovakia , life_span = 1918–19391945–1992 , p1 = Austria-Hungary , image_p1 ...
, on 26 October 1926, Zbyněk Z. Stránský studied history and philosophy at
Charles University ) , image_name = Carolinum_Logo.svg , image_size = 200px , established = , type = Public, Ancient , budget = 8.9 billion CZK , rector = Milena Králíčková , faculty = 4,057 , administrative_staff = 4,026 , students = 51,438 , undergr ...
, in
Prague Prague ( ; cs, Praha ; german: Prag, ; la, Praga) is the capital and largest city in the Czech Republic, and the historical capital of Bohemia. On the Vltava river, Prague is home to about 1.3 million people. The city has a temperate ...
, from 1946 to 1950. During the 1950s, he worked in several Czech museums and in 1962 he was appointed the head of the innovative Department of Museology of the Moravian Museum and the J. E. Purkyně University, in Brno, in which he has established, under the influence of Jan JelínekJan Jelínek is a Czech museologist and anthropologist, ICOM president from 1971 to 1977 and the first president of ICOFOM in 1977. He directed the Moravian Museum, in Brno.  (1926-2004), the museum director, the first teaching school of museology devoted to museological theory in the world. Already in the 1960s and 1970s, Stránský was considered the leading person of the Central-European museological school.


Role in the international community

Between 1980 and 1990, Stránský was an active participant of the International Committee for Museology-ICOFOM, of the
International Council of Museums The International Council of Museums (ICOM) is a non-governmental organisation dedicated to museums, maintaining formal relations with UNESCO and having a consultative status with the United Nations Economic and Social Council. Founded in 1946, I ...
-ICOM, being in charge, from 1985, of the terminological project that aimed to create a Treaty of Museology and a ''Dictionarium Museologicum''.Publication of a dictionary with the translation for twenty different languages of essential museological terms. See Dictionarium Museologicum. Budapest National Center of Museums, 1983. Until the beginning of the 1990s, ICOFOM has expressed its mission to “establish museology as a scientific discipline”.ICOFOM-International Committee for Museology, Museological News, Semi-Annual Bulletin of the International Committee of ICOM for Museology, n. 15, June, 1992. Stránský has continually influenced this committee and participated in several of its meetings, becoming an elected member of its executive board in 1986.


The training in museology and the "Brno school"

Throughout his whole career, Zbyněk Z. Stránský worked to establish a complete and coherent training in museology,Stránský was not the only one to develop a course in museology in the second half of the 20th century. We may recall the examples of the courses created by Raymond Singleton and later by Geoffrey Lewis, in Leicester, or the course created by Georges Henri Rivière, in France, in 1970, or even the programs of Toron, in Poland, the one in Zagreb, Yugoslavia (now in Croatia) or the one from the American Association of Museums in the United States. aiming to secure a place for museologists as thinkers and researchers. In 1962, a few professionals from the Moravian Museum created the Department of Museology, institutionally connected both to the museum and to J. E. Purkyně University, establishing a line of museological training that was going to be characterized as the “Brno School”.Cerávolo, Suely Moraes. Da palavra ao termo: um caminho para compreender a museologia. 2004. 218 f. Tese (Doutorado em Biblioteconomia e Documentação) – Escola de Comunicação e Artes, Universidade de São Paulo, 2004. The craved transformation envisaged “making a real profession of museum work”.Jelínek, Jan, in Stránský, Zbyněk Z., “Brno: Education in Museology”, Museological Papers V, Supplementum 2, Brno: J. E. Purkyně University and Moravian Museum, 1974, p.10. On 20 June 1968, the students of the first class of museology received their university diplomas in Brno.Stránský, Zbyněk Z., “The first museology graduates in Brno”, ICOM – International Council of Museums, ICOM News / Nouvelles de l’ICOM, vol. 22, n. 2, June 1969, pp.61-62. As reported by Stránský, most of them were museum directors or professionals who already had a degree in another disciplinary field. The museology course had the duration of two years, with four sessions composed of one hundred lessons each, including theoretical courses and practical lessons. The themes of the classes were divided between general museology and special museology. In the year of 1986, his training program in museology, in Brno, would gain an increasing number of new followers from every part of the world, with the creation of his International Summer School of Museology – ISSOM. Inside the structure of the so-called
Masaryk University Masaryk University (MU) ( cs, Masarykova univerzita; la, Universitas Masarykiana Brunensis) is the second largest university in the Czech Republic, a member of the Compostela Group and the Utrecht Network. Founded in 1919 in Brno as the seco ...
The Masaryk University was founded in Brno in 1919 and it is currently the second largest university in the Czech Republic. In 1960, the university was renamed Jan Evangelista Purkyně University, taking the name of the Czech biologist. In 1990, following the Velvet Revolution it regained its original name.  and with the support of
UNESCO The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization is a specialized agency of the United Nations (UN) aimed at promoting world peace and security through international cooperation in education, arts, sciences and culture. It ...
, the ISSOM lasted until the year 1999, disseminating the theoretical knowledge of Museology. In 1998, Stránský leaves the city of Brno to live in
Banská Bystrica Banská Bystrica (, also known by other alternative names) is a middle-sized town in central Slovakia, located on the Hron River in a long and wide valley encircled by the mountain chains of the Low Tatras, the Veľká Fatra, and the Kremnica Mo ...
, a city of
Slovakia Slovakia (; sk, Slovensko ), officially the Slovak Republic ( sk, Slovenská republika, links=no ), is a landlocked country in Central Europe. It is bordered by Poland to the north, Ukraine to the east, Hungary to the south, Austria to the s ...
, where he has created the Department of Ecomuseology, which he would coordinate. Stránský continued to teach museology at the University of Matej Bel, in Banská Bystrica, until the year 2002. In the following years, he returned to Brno as an invited lecturer. Stránský continued to publish texts on the Theory of Museology, trying to reaffirm and adapt his structured system for this science until the first decade of this century. He died in Banská Bystrica, on the 21 January 2016.


Points of view on Museology

Museology, a term that acquired different connotations throughout the 20th century and even before,On the history of the term until the 20th century, see Aquilina, 2011; and Desvallées & Mairesse, 2011. thanks to the attempt to obtain academic legitimacy by some Czech museum professionals, it would gain a new dimension, from the 1960s, either as a science or as an autonomous disciplinary field, providing the necessary bases for museum work. In his structural theory, Stránský was committed to the investigation of essential points considered by him as indispensable for the constitution of a scientific discipline: # first, a science must have defined a specific subject of study; # then, a science must use its own set of methods; # a science must have a specific terminology, a language; # and, at last, it must be based on a theoretical system.Stránský, Zbyněk Z., “Museology as a Science (a Thesis)”, Museologia, n.15, XI, 1980, pp. 33-39. The search for scientific legitimation, thus, should be followed by the concomitant construction of a theoretical system of museology accordingly to the framework of contemporary sciences.


Metamuseology

In the context of the 1960s, Stránský has appointed that there were objective reasons for the “birth of museology as a science”,Idem, p.26. however, its internal prerequisite, i.e., the logical structure, was inexistent. His question on the character of museology, then, made him think on the theoretical base of the very theory.Stranský, Zbyněk Z., “Predmet muzeologie”, in Stranský, Zbyněk Z., (ed.), Sborník materiálu prvého muzeologického symposia, Brno: Moravian Museum, 1965, p.31. In other words, Stránský has built a metatheoretical problematic as the starting point for structuring the scientific discipline, introducing the notion of metamuseology.Stranský, Zbyněk Z., Introduction à l’étude de la muséologie, Destinée aux étudiants de l’École Internationale d’Été de Muséologie – EIEM, Brno : Université Masaryk, 1995, p.15.  The term designates “the theory whose subject is museology in itself”, in a certain way being strictly bound to museology, but also related to philosophy, to history and to the theory of science and culture. In his metamuseological approach, the first problem raised concerned museology's subject of study. Stránský proposed some disconcerting questions for the field under development. With his initial declaration, in which he denies the museum as the scientific subject,Stranský, Zbyněk Z., “Predmet muzeologie”, in Stranský, Zbyněk Z., (ed.), Sborník materiálu prvého muzeologického symposia, Brno: Moravian Museum, 1965, pp. 30-33. the author opens the way towards a long process of self-reflection that marked museology in its bases in Eastern Europe. By stating that the “subject of museology is not and cannot be the museum”,Stranský, Zbyněk Z., “Predmet muzeologie”, in Stranský, Zbyněk Z., (ed.), Sborník materiálu prvého muzeologického symposia, Brno: Moravian Museum, 1965, p.33. Stránský intended to separate the “instrument” – or the means, i.e., the museum – and the “end” to which it serves. He alleges, in effect, what could have been considered obvious in the context of post-war museums, which is the fact that the museum, as an institution that serves to a certain end, could not be the study subject of a science. Nevertheless, and in a tautological approach, according to some of his critics,See Desvallées, André & Mairesse, François, Dictionnaire encyclopédique de muséologie, Paris : Armand Colin, 2011. 722p. he would propose that museology's subject of study should be searched in the very museum work, in the “systematic and critical” task of producing the museum object or ''musealia'', in Stranskian terminology.


Museality

This thinker was, then, responsible for the dislocation of museology's subject from the museum, as a historic institution, to museality – understood as a “specific documentary value”.Stránský, Zbyněk Z., “Brno: Education in Museology”, Museological Papers V, Supplementum 2, Brno: J. E. Purkyně University and Moravian Museum, 1974, p.28. This last concept, central to his theory, would lead Stránský to conceive the cognitive intention of museology as the scientific interpretation of an “attitude of man to reality”. In his opinion, this seizing of the museum character of things, which he called “museality”, must be “in the center of the gnoseological intention of museology”Stránský, Zbyněk Z., “Museology and Museums”, ICOFOM Study Series – ISS, n. 12, Stockholm, ICOM International Committee for Museology, 1987, p.289. as this discipline's scientific task, delimiting its position within the system of sciences. Hence, the concept of museality (''“muzealita”''), understood as the “quality” or “value” of musealia, appeared in Stránský's works in 1970,Stránský, Zbyněk Z., “Múzejnictvo v relácii teórie a praxe”, Múzeum, 1970, roč. XV, č. 3, pp. 173-183. being proposed as museology's true subject of study. The first attempts to define the term, however, have presented logical problems. The museologist from the ancient
German Democratic Republic German(s) may refer to: * Germany (of or related to) **Germania (historical use) * Germans, citizens of Germany, people of German ancestry, or native speakers of the German language ** For citizens of Germany, see also German nationality law **Ger ...
, Klaus Schreiner, for instance, hasn't conceived museality as the property of an object as such but as something that is attributed to the object only in the context of a particular, specialized discipline. According to Schreiner, there cannot be a value “in itself” and the concept of museality in the Stranskian sense is the product of a “bourgeois-imperialist axiology”. He considers that the philosophical value propagated is “timeless, classless and generally not human” and that, as such, it “absolutizes the bourgeois class interests”.Schreiner, Klaus, “Forschungsgegenstand der Museologie und Disziplingenese”, Neue Museumskunde, vol. 23, n. 1, 1987, pp.4-8, passim. As noted by
Peter Van Mensch Peter van Mensch (born June 7, 1947, in Gouda), Netherlands is a Dutch scholar in the field of museology, and previously a professor of Cultural Heritage at Amsterdam University of the Arts. Biography Peter van Mensch earned an MSc degree in ...
, Stránský would modify the concept of museality over the years, changing its sense from a value category to the “specific value orientation” itself.van Mensch, Peter, Towards a Methodology of Museology, PhD Thesis. University of Zágreb, Zágreb, 1992. Available at: . Access in: 27 July 2007.


Influences

There can be appointed several influences to the work of Zbyněk Z. Stránský. However, not all of them can be attested with direct citation in his texts. Some authors will suppose, for instance, that the knowledge of studies by the Belgian
Paul Otlet Paul Marie Ghislain Otlet (; ; 23 August 1868 – 10 December 1944) was a Belgian author, entrepreneur, lawyer and peace activist; predicting the arrival of the internet before World War II, he is among those considered to be the father of infor ...
on Bibliology would have influenced Stranskian thinking on scientific museology. In his theoretical texts, it is possible to note, among the most quoted authors, the Czechs Jiři Neustupný and Josef Beneš, as well as the Russian Awraam M. Razgon. It must be acknowledged, still, the fundamental support of the Czechs Jan Jelínek and Vinoš Sofka who have contributed to the dialogues established between Stránský and the international context of museology through his insertion in ICOFOM and the creation of ISSOM.


Influenced authors

The referencial thinking of Stránský for Central and Eastern Europe would be cited in publications mainly since the 1970s, by authors such as the Russian A. M. Razgon, the British Geoffrey D. Lewis, the German, from the GDR, Klaus Schreiner, the Czech Anna Gregorová, the Brazilian Waldisa Rússio, and the Dutch
Peter van Mensch Peter van Mensch (born June 7, 1947, in Gouda), Netherlands is a Dutch scholar in the field of museology, and previously a professor of Cultural Heritage at Amsterdam University of the Arts. Biography Peter van Mensch earned an MSc degree in ...
, among others. In the years 1990, several museology authors, from the connection with Stránský and his works in ICOFOM and ISSOM, would take his own interpretations from the reflections he initiated assimilating their own ideas to the thinking in their respective countries; this would be the case, for instance, of Bernard Deloche, in France, and Tereza Scheiner, in Brazil. In general, even if some Anglo-Saxon museologists try to reduce the discipline to a set of techniques, those from the countries located in the ancient Eastern Europe, such as Anna Gregorová and Klaus Schreiner, define it as a science under construction. In effect, the first critics to this conception are
Kenneth Hudson A Kenneth Hudson (4 July 1916 – 28 December 1999) was a journalist, museologist, broadcaster and book author. Early career He was born in Harlesden and educated at the Lower School of John Lyon (now The John Lyon School) in Harrow and at ...
(UK) and George E. Burcaw (United States), so that the more theoretical approach to museology, from Stránský, was followed by authors in countries with a bigger tendency to theorization: the German and Latin schools, as well as Latin America. Authors such as the Dutch Peter van Mensch proposed to structure the discipline based on the model initiated by Stránský. He understood museology according to five aspects: general museology, theoretical museology (or matamuseology, for Stránský), special museology, historic museology and applied museology. To these five aspects Stránský would propose to include social museology, to study the phenomenon of musealization in current societies. Furthermore, Peter van Mensch would amplify his reflection on the professionalization of museology. He proposes the PRC model (Preservation, Research and Communication), based on the recognition of the discipline as a true science.


The influence in ICOFOM LAM

According to the de spirit of the Declaration of Santiago of Chile (1972), and with the goal to decentralize the action of the International Committee for Museology, it is created in 1986, the Regional Subcommittee of ICOFOM for Latin America and the Caribbean – ICOFOM LAM, conceived by Nelly Decarolis (Argentina) and Tereza Scheiner (Brazil). The scientific profile of the field and the theoretical reflections would be reaffirmed, considered as central matters for the Region. However, Tereza Scheiner and Luciana Menezes de Carvalho (Brazil) pointed out that, differentiating itself from Stránský, “museology has the character of a theory, but not of a science”. Particularly in the context of Brazil, the theoretical perspective developed by Stránský was introduced in the country in the 1980s, mainly in the works of Waldisa Rússio (in São Paulo) and Tereza Scheiner (in Rio de Janeiro), both responsible for the creation of “schools” based on this author's thinking and marked by the configuration of museology as a science.Regarding this influence in the context of museology teaching in Rio de Janeiro, see .


Recognition by the field

In 1993, with the work "De museologica" (manuscript), Stránský received the title of associate professor (in Czech, ''docent''). In 1996, getting the title of regular professor, he rejected it with the justification that museology is not an official credential Science. In 2006, Stránský was given the Silver medal of Masaryk University from the hands of the rector
Petr Fiala Petr Fiala (; born 1 September 1964) is a Czech politician and political scientist who has been the Prime Minister of the Czech Republic since November 2021 and leader of the Civic Democratic Party (ODS) since 2014. He previously served as the ...
. In Brazil, with the support of ICOFOM, an homage for Stránský was organized by the
Universidade Federal do Estado do Rio de Janeiro The Federal University of the State of Rio de Janeiro ( pt, Universidade Federal do Estado do Rio de Janeiro, UNIRIO), is one of the four federally funded public universities in the State of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. It has several campuses in the ...
– UNIRIO, in the III Debates Cicle of the Museology School, organized in October, 2015, in celebration of the 50th anniversary of Stránský's declaration on museology's study subject, in 1965. In 2015, the Regional Subcommittee of ICOFOM to Latin America and the Caribbean – ICOFOM LAM has dedicated the year for the work of Stránský and his influence in the Region, in the occasion of the XXIII Annual Meeting of ICOFOM LAM, in
Panama City Panama City ( es, Ciudad de Panamá, links=no; ), also known as Panama (or Panamá in Spanish), is the capital and largest city of Panama. It has an urban population of 880,691, with over 1.5 million in its metropolitan area. The city is locat ...
. After his death, in 2016, the Czech journal Museologica Brunensia is organizing a special issue dedicated to Zbyněk Z. Stránský.


Main works

Stránský, Zbyněk Z. Predmet muzeologie. In: _____. (ed.). Sborník materiálu prvého muzeologického symposia. Brno: Museu da Morávia, 1965. pp. 30–33. _____. The first museology graduates in Brno.  ICOM – International Council of Museums, ICOM News / Nouvelles de l’ICOM, vol. 22, n. 2, June 1969, pp. 61–62. _____. Múzejnictvo v relácii teórie a praxe. Múzeum, 1970, roč. XV., č. 3, pp. 173–183. _____. Brno: Education in Museology. Museological Papers V, Supplementum 2. Brno: J. E. Purkyně University and Moravian Museum, 1974. 47p. _____. (sob o pseudônimo E. Schneider). La voie du musée, exposition au Musée de Morave, Brno. Museum, vol. XXXIX, n°4, 1977, p. 183-191. _____. Museological principles of museum exhibitions. The Problems of Contents, Didactics and Aesthetics of Modern Museum Exhibitions. International Museological Seminary, 1978, p. 71-93. _____. Museology as a Science (a Thesis), Museologia, n.15, XI, 1980a, pp. 33–39. _____. In: SOFKA, Vinos (org.). MUWOP: Museological Working Papers/DOTRAM: Documents de Travail en Muséologie. Stockholm: ICOM, International Committee for Museology/ICOFOM; Museum of National Antiquities, v. 1, 1980b. pp. 42–44. Disponível em: http://network.icom.museum/icofom/publications/our-publications/. ____. In: SOFKA, Vinos (org.). MUWOP: Museological Working Papers/DOTRAM: Documents de Travail en Muséologie. Stockholm: ICOM, International Committee for Museology/ICOFOM; Museum of National Antiquities, v. 2, 1981, pp. 19–22 et pp. 72–76. Disponível em: http://network.icom.museum/icofom/publications/our-publications/. _____. Dictionarium museologicum und unsere Teilnahme, Muzeum, vol. 29, n°3, 1984, pp. 11–17. _____. Working Group on the Treatise on Museology – aims and orientation. Museological News, Semi-Annual Bulletin of the International Committee of ICOM for Museology, n. 8, Stockholm, September, 1985a, pp. 25–28. _____. Working Group on terminology. Museological News, Semi-Annual Bulletin of the International Committee of ICOM for Museology, n. 8, Stockholm, September, 1985b, pp. 29–31. _____. Introduction à l’étude de la muséologie. Destinée aux étudiants de l’École Internationale d’Été de Muséologie – EIEM. Brno : Université Masaryk, 1995. 116p. _____. Archeologie a muzeologie. Brno: Masarykova Univerzita, 2005. Texts published in ICOFOM Study Series (available at <http://network.icom.museum/icofom/publications/our-publications/>): Stránský, Zbyněk Z. A provocative check list, in Collecting Today for Tomorrow.  ISS 6, 1984, p. 7–11. _____.  Comment, in Museology and Developing Countries.  ISS 15, 1988, p. 237–240. _____.   Commentaire, in Muséologie et pays en voie de développement.  ISS 15, 1988, p. 241–244. _____.  Comments and views on basic papers presented in ISS No.  8: Originals and Substitutes in Museums.  ISS 9, 1985, p. 61–63. _____. Current acquisition policy and its appropriateness for tomorrow's needs.  ISS 6, 1984, p. 145–151. _____.   Forecasting – a museological tool? Museology and futurology.  ISS 16, 1989, p. 297–301. _____.  Is museology a sequel of the existence of museums or did it precede their arrival and must museology thus programme their future? ISS 12, 1987, p. 287–292. _____.   La muséologie – science ou seulement travail pratique du musée ?  DoTraM 1, 1980, p. 42–44. _____.  La muséologie est-elle une conséquence de l’existence des musées ou les précède-t-elle et détermine leur avenir ? ISS 12, 1987, p. 293–298. _____.   La muséologie et l’identité : commentaires et points de vue.  ISS 11, 1986, p. 55–60. _____.   La prospective – un outil muséologique ?  Muséologie et futurologie.  ISS 16, 1989, p. 303–308. _____.  La théorie des systèmes et la muséologie.  MuWoP 2, 1981, p. 72–76. _____.  Methodology of museology and professional training.  ISS 1, 1983, p. 126–132. _____.  Methodology of museology and training of personnel – Comments.  ISS 3, 1983, p. 14–22. _____.  Museologie : deus ex-machina.  ISS 15, 1988, p. 215–223. _____.  Museology and identity: comments and views.  ISS 11, 1986, p. 49–53. _____.  Museology deus ex-machina.  ISS 15, 1988, p. 207–214. _____.   Museum – Territory – Society – Comments.  ISS 3, 1983, p. 28–31. _____.  Museum – Territory – Society.  ISS 2, 1983, p. 27–33. _____.  Object - document, or do we know what we are actually collecting?  ISS 23, 1994, p. 47–51. _____.  Originals versus substitutes.  ISS 9, 1985, p. 95–102. _____.  Originaux contre substitutes.  ISS 9, 1985, p. 103–113. _____.   Originaux et substituts dans les musées.  Commentaires et points de vue sur les mémoires de base présentés dans l’ISS N° 8.  ISS 9, 1985, p. 65–68. _____.   Politique courante d’acquisition et adaptation aux besoins de demain.  ISS 6, 1984, p. 152–160. _____.  The Department of Museology, Faculty of Arts, Masaryk University of Brno and the questions of defining a profile of the museology curriculum.  ISS 22, 1993, p. 127–131. _____.   The language of exhibitions.  ISS 19, 1991, p. 129–133. _____.   The ontology of memory and museology.  ISS 27, 1997, p. 269–272. _____.  Une check-list provocatrice, in Collectionner aujourd’hui pour demain.  ISS 6, 1984, p. 12–14.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Stransky, Zbynek Zbyslav Museologists Czech social scientists 1926 births 2016 deaths People from Kutná Hora