A Date with Science and Religion: An Analysis of the Encoding and Decoding Practices at the Dead Sea Scrolls Exhibit in Charlotte, North Carolina

Updated by: 
Oren Ableman
Research notes: 
Reader Checked OA 28/10/2013
Reference type: 
Journal Article
Author(s): 
Scott, David W.
Stout, Daniel
year: 
2012
Full title: 

A Date with Science and Religion: An Analysis of the Encoding and Decoding Practices at the Dead Sea Scrolls Exhibit in Charlotte, North Carolina

Journal / Book Title || Series Title: 
Critical Studies in Media Communication
Volume: 
29
Issue / Series Volume: 
1
Pages: 
27-44
Abstract: 

Museums are sites of contested meaning that bring together artifacts of the other with the sense-making practices of patrons. The Dead Sea Scrolls exhibit in Charlotte, North Carolina exemplifies a similar struggle as patrons negotiate between appeals to the authority of science and appeals to the authority of the Bible. Our analysis demonstrates that religion?rather than class struggle?permeates the encoding and decoding practices there. This struggle is exacerbated in part because of the religious nature of the arti-facts on display; and also because when read as a text, the site's latent discourse reinforces the collective belief among many Evangelical Christians in the accuracy of the Bible. Furthermore, the exhibit's public relations campaign, its layout and design, and the predominantly Christian background of its guests coalesce to amplify a sense of the numinous.

URL: 
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15295036.2010.517777
Label: 
08/04/2013
Record number: 
17 708