Kodėl muziejai grąžina kultūrines vertybes
1,564,870 views |
Chip Colwell |
TEDxMileHigh
• July 2017
Archeologas ir kuratorius Chip Colwell renka artefaktus savo muziejui, bet taip pat grąžina juos ten, iš kur jie kilę. Susimąstyti skatinančioje kalboje jis pasakoja, kaip kai kurie muziejai susiduria su vogtų dvasinių objektų ir senų kapaviečių plėšimo paveldu, ir kaip jie mažina atskirtį su bendruomenėmis, reikalaujančiomis, kad jų kultūrinės vertybės būtų grąžintos.
Archeologas ir kuratorius Chip Colwell renka artefaktus savo muziejui, bet taip pat grąžina juos ten, iš kur jie kilę. Susimąstyti skatinančioje kalboje jis pasakoja, kaip kai kurie muziejai susiduria su vogtų dvasinių objektų ir senų kapaviečių plėšimo paveldu, ir kaip jie mažina atskirtį su bendruomenėmis, reikalaujančiomis, kad jų kultūrinės vertybės būtų grąžintos.
This talk was presented to a local audience at TEDxMileHigh, an independent event. TED's editors chose to feature it for you.
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Chip Colwell is an archaeologist who tries to answer the tangled question: Who owns the past?
Chip Colwell | University of Chicago Press, 2017 | Book
This book offers a lively personal account of the process of repatriation, following the trail of four objects as they were created, collected, and ultimately returned to their sources. These stories reveal a dramatic process that involves not merely obeying the law, but negotiating the blurry lines between identity and morality, spirituality and politics.
David Hurst Thomas | Basic Books, 2000 | Book
Renowned scholar David Hurst Thomas’ book investigates the historical development of archaeology and how it came to appropriate Native American culture and identity. The book swirls around one of the most contested skeletons in recent memory — the 9,000-year-old Kennewick Man — to argue that the central struggle between archaeologists and Native Americans is most basically about power and control.
Samuel J. Redman | Harvard University Press, 2016 | Book
Historian Samuel J. Redman has written an invaluable story about museums and how they became so enthralled with the human body. Hint: ideas of “race” and the realities of racism play central characters.
Kenn Harper | Washington Square Press, 2000 | Book
In 1897, explorer Robert E. Peary brought six Inuit to New York where they could be live “specimens” for anthropologists at the American Museum of Natural History. Four die soon after their arrival, and the body of one is stolen for scientific study. This tragic story is unforgettable and haunting.
Jay D. Aronson | University of Harvard Press, 2016 | Book
The struggle over human remains extends far beyond Native America. This chilling history of the 9/11 victims of the World Trade Center is necessary reading, and will make you ask hard questions about those with power over human remains.
Michael Kammen | University of Chicago Press, 2010 | Book
A surprising number of famous and infamous Americans have been exhumed from their graves—and returned back into the earth. This fascinatingly macabre history will keep you turning the pages and wondering it means to rest in peace.
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This talk was presented to a local audience at TEDxMileHigh, an independent event. TED's editors chose to feature it for you.
Read more about TEDx.