PLAY PODCASTS
Iced Museums, repatriated
Episode 165

Iced Museums, repatriated

Addison McDonald of Mass MoCA chats about the upcoming exhibits and events headed to North Adams, Emily Brewster alerts us to disappearing "d"s from descriptive words, and NEPM's Nancy Cohen elaborates on the repatriation of indigenous remains from museum collections.

The Fabulous 413 · Monte Belmonte & Kaliis Smith

May 25, 202349m 34s

Audio is streamed directly from the publisher (dovetail.prxu.org) as published in their RSS feed. Play Podcasts does not host this file. Rights-holders can request removal through the copyright & takedown page.

Show Notes

There's a little extra curation happening today.

The Word Nerd, Emily Brewster, senior editor at Merriam-Webster, and our resident wordster, alerts us that a shift is happening between our iced coffee and ice tea. Letters are disappearing from certain descriptive words in a totally natural way and we dig into why.

Then we are figuring out how to un-curate, of sorts. Thousands of indigenous remains have been kept in museum, school, and library collections for ages. And the rules for giving those remains back to the peoples they came from are about to change in a drastic way. We sit with NEPM's Nancy Eve Cohen to find out more about the ways NAGPRA, the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act, is changing and how that affects some local tribes and institutions.

And we're more than a little impressed by the curation Mass MoCA has done for it's summer program. From theater, to installations, to a bevvy of fantastic musicians from all over the globe, they're pulling out a lot of stops in these next few months. Addison McDonald, general manager of performing arts and film, chats with us about the things he's most excited to share with us in North Adams.

Plus, we reminisce on the legacy that the great Tina Turner leaves in her wake.