Museum Archipelago

91. How Fake Museums Are Used in Theme Parks with Shaelyn Amaio

04.19.2021 - By Ian ElsnerPlay

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Museums can be a shorthand for truth, or for history, or for what a culture values. Disney theme parks all around the world use fake museums as a tool to immerse visitors in the themed environment. This detailed world-building can make the imaginary universe more real—or provide a setup to subvert a narrative.

But these fake museums aren’t the only ways the Disney theme parks present history to visitors. Public experience advocate Shaelyn Amaio describes how the parks “traffic in the past.” By removing references to the present or a future with consequences, parks like Disneyland free the visitor from responsibility for what happened in history. Since the opening of Disneyland in 1955, there have been several iterations of Disney theme parks, each reflecting the way we think about knowledge and history in the times they were built.

In this episode, Amaio describes examples of fake museums in Disney theme parks, details how corporate-sponsored edutainment can reflect the public's anxiety, and explains why EPCOT has the most museum-like spaces at Disney theme parks.

Topics and Notes

00:00 Intro

00:15 The Yeti Museum

01:30 Shaelyn Amaio

02:03 Amaio’s First Visit to Disney World

03:30 Yesterday, Tomorrow and Fantasy: History and Innocence in the Magic Kingdom

05:50 EPCOT and World’s Fairs

08:01 17. Entertainment and History at Disney’s America

09:12 Dinosaur at Disney’s Animal Kingdom

10:20 Layering in Theme Park Design

11:00 Overlap Between Museums and Theme Parks

11:55 Outro | Join Club Archipelago

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