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The framework of Library and In formation Science (LIS) underscores libraries,
archives and museums alike, as they are all cultural institutions with many parallel issues.
One area of inquiry within LIS is the study of information behavior—how individuals
encounter and make sense of their world. This study explores experiences of the museum
user that are non-practical goal-oriented and deeply affective—specifically numinous
experiences with museum objects. A numinous experience in the museum context refers
to a deeply meaningful, transcendent encounter. The aims of this study were to: 1)
describe the meaning museum users make of these special encounters; 2) identify patterns
or themes, if any, that emerge from their descriptions of these experiences; and 3)
contribute a perspective to the overall understanding of the museum user experience. This
inquiry used interpretive phenomenological methodology, drawing on perspectives
informed by documentation studies, reader response theory, and Deweyian notions of
transaction and experience.
Data analysis based on five intensive interviews with museum users revealed four
essential themes (meanings) of these experiences, with the first theme acting as an overarching
grand theme to the others: 1) Unity of the Moment - the experience is a holistic,
uniting of emotions, feelings, and intellect with the experienced object; 2) Object Link -
that the object links the experiencer to the past through both tangible and symbolic
meanings; 3) Being Transported - the experience is felt as if one is being transported to
another time and place, and is felt temporally, spatially, and bodily; and 4) Connections
Bigger Than Self- the experience consists of deeply felt epiphanic connections with the
past, self and spirit.
These four themes are interpreted in the frames of Dewey's aesthetic experience,
Csikszentmihalyi's psychological flow, and William James' mystical consciousness. The
combination of these three sets of concepts helps illuminate the meanings behind the
numinous encounter. This research demonstrated that the physical object is central to the
user's numinous experience, as part of this total holistic encounter. These findings
underscore the multidimensional modes by which museum objects affect visitors, and the
need to compare such experience with the effect of surrogates such as digital images on
people. |
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