An elaborately crafted and decorated tomahawk from somewhere along the
North American east coast: how did it end up in the royal collections in
Stockholm in the late seventeenth century? What does it say about the
Swedish kingdom's colonial ambitions and desires? What questions does it
raise from its present place in a display cabinet in the Museum of
Ethnography in Stockholm?
Colonial Objects in Early Modern Sweden and Beyond is about the tomahawk
and other objects like it, acquired in colonial contact zones and
displayed by Swedish elites in the seventeenth century. Its first part
situates the objects in two distinct but related spaces: the expanding
space of the colonial world, and the exclusive space of the Kunstkammer.
The second part traces the objects' physical and epistemological
transfer from the Kunstkammer to the modern museum system. In the final
part, colonial objects are considered at the centre of a heated debate
over the present state of museums, and their possible futures.