Listen "Is the Digital Age Making Museums Obsolete?"
Episode Synopsis
Before the digital age, museums were places where people went to acquire knowledge. But now most of the information and images contained in museums are available on your smartphone. So how can museums stave off obsolescence? Can populist shows and attention-getting architecture keep museums relevant and pull today’s audiences away from their devices? Are some museums succeeding in redefining their purpose as providing “experiences” and at least the semblance of authenticity, like touching mastodon bones or reading directly from the pages of Lincoln’s diary or Gutenberg’s Bible? And what happens when museums try to use social media and other technology to connect visitors to exhibits—and to each other? Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County president and director Lori Bettison-Varga, Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center director Lisa Sasaki, and Nicole Ivy, George Washington University public historian and former director of inclusion for the American Alliance of Museums, visited Zócalo to discuss the threats and opportunities that new technologies create for some of our most durable institutions. The event, moderated by Gregory Rodriguez, publisher and editor-in-chief of Zócalo Public Square, took place at the National Center for the Preservation of Democracy.
More episodes of the podcast Zócalo Public Square
Is Hip-Hop America's Biggest Success Story?
22/10/2025
What Is the Language of Taste?
10/10/2025
Will California's Future Be Exceptional?
25/09/2025
Can Music Change Minds?
15/09/2025
How Is Migration Woven Into America?
18/08/2025
Can Hip-Hop Be the Soundtrack for Change?
22/07/2025
How Do We See Ourselves In Each Other?
09/05/2025
What Alliances Do We Need In Perilous Times?
14/03/2025
ZARZA We are Zarza, the prestigious firm behind major projects in information technology.