Performing Speciation: The Nature/Culture Divide at the Creation Museum Chapter uri icon

abstract

  • This essay concerns the historiographic constructions of time, space, and matter as produced and performed by Answers in Genesis, a non-profit Christian apologetics ministry, in its Creation Museum, [a] state-of-the-art 70,000 square foot museum in Petersburg, Kentucky. The museum brings the pages of the Bible to life1 by steering its visitors through slick displays and interactive exhibits, effectively mobilizing visitors bodies to bring to life the story of young-earth creationism, a literal interpretation of Judeo-Christian scriptures that maintains the earth is only a little over six thousand years old. Creation Museum visitors find not only biblical simulations with animatronic dinosaurs sharing the garden of Eden with Adam and Eve, they also encounter a reconstruction of Lucy, the hominid fossil scientists identify as an early ancestor of contemporary humans (figure 1.1). Rather than standing upright like an early human, however, the Creation Museums figure hunches in a simian pose, knuckles dragging, spine parallel to the ground. Through exhibits like Lucy, the museum, while recognizing the existence of fossils as evidence of life forms that no longer inhabit the earth, positions itself against sciences view of the earth as billions of years old, and of the earths life formsespecially human beingsas the current state of millions of years of evolutionary change.

author list (cited authors)

  • Spalink, A., & Magelssen, S.

citation count

  • 0

complete list of authors

  • Spalink, Angenette||Magelssen, Scott

editor list (cited editors)

  • Bank, R. K., & Kobialka, M.

Book Title

  • Theatre/Performance Historiography

publication date

  • January 2015