Editorial: Worries, Threats and a Catastrophe
Editorial: Worries, Threats
and a Catastrophe
John Carman, Ironbridge International Institute for Cultural Heritage, University of
Birmingham, ERI Building, Pritchatts Road, Edgbaston, Birmingham, B15 2TT, UK
E-mail:
EDITORIAL
Archaeologies: Journal of the World Archaeological Congress (Ó 2018)
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11759-018-9355-9
Jan Turek, Center for Theoretical Study, Joint Research Institute of Charles University
and the Czech Academy of Sciences, Husova 4, 110 00, Prague 1, Czech Republic
Should We Be Worried?
On 9th October 2018 in Frankfurt, Germany, the European Union High
Representative for Foreign Affairs Federica Mogherini called the European
Union a ‘world cultural superpower’ in her keynote speech at the opening
of the 2018 Frankfurt Book Fair. She said:
Culture is an integral part of our European foreign policy. We are by definition, as Europeans, a soft power. And even now that we are investing more
than ever in developing our hard power—that sometimes is needed—our
European Defence, our strategic autonomy that sometimes might be needed
we continue to be a cultural superpower. Let me say, the cultural superpower
in the world.
Also stressing the importance of cultural diplomacy, she added that the
EU’s goal was not to replace national cultural diplomacy, but
This journal and its sponsoring organisation, the World Archaeological
Congress, are committed to diversity, multivocality, social justice and contesting local and global power geometries within the discipline of archaeology. We are also concerned for the legacies of colonialism and nationalism
within the discipline and the rights and ethics relating to cultural property,
issues of acquisition, custodianship, conservation, and display. Given our
specific interests in these topics, this overt statement of European ‘cultural
superpower’ status and the plans to disseminate evidences of that power
across the globe may be a very worrying development.
Ó 2018 World Archaeological Congress
ARCHAEOLOGIES
on the contrary, we are trying to give it even more strength, joining forces at
the European level. For instance, we are starting to build ‘Houses of European culture’ around the world, as a home for all European cultural institutes and a way to give voice and visibility to all European national cultures
abroad.
JOHN CARMAN, JAN TUREK
The EU was established to ensure not just that European nations would
no longer go to war against each other—such wars rapidly turning global—but also to establish a model whereby principles of equality between
peoples could be adopted. If Europe is now claiming ‘cultural superpower’
status, it is going against its own founding principles. The danger is that so
much good that has been done since the end of World War 2 may now be
undone.
World Heritage on Fire
On Sunday night 2nd September, Brazil’s oldest and most important historical and scientific museum in Rio de Janeiro was consumed by a catastrophic fire, and most (perhaps 90%) of its 20 million items have been
destroyed.
Governments were to blame for failing to support the museum and letting it fall into disrepair. At its 200th anniversary in June, not a single state
minister attended the celebration ceremony. Part of the shocking Brazilian
government and local authority policy of neglect is the fact that the
museum building was not even insured.
Some exhibits survived in a separate annex of the building, including a
library of 500,000 books and including works of art dating back to the era
of the Portuguese empire.
Among the objects that hopefully may have survived are fragments of
the skeletal remains of ‘Luzia’, an Upper Palaeolithic Paleo-Indian woman
who was found in a grotto in Lapa Vermelha, Pedro Leopoldo, Great Belo
Horizonte, Brazil, in 1974. It was believed that the young woman may have
been part of the first wave of immigrants to South America, 11,500 years
ago.
The museum was also home to 700 ancient Egyptian artefacts, including
the coffin of Sha-Amun-em-su, an unopened wooden painted coffin from
Thebes, dated to around 750 BC. X-ray examination of the coffin suggested
that as well as the body, there were amulets still intact inside and these
possibly survived the fire. Another earlier coffin that belonged to the priest
Hori probably also vanished. Unfortunately, the rest of museum’s Egyptology collection was completely destroyed.
The destroyed collection included a total of about 1800 artefacts from
the pre-Colombian era, including pieces from Andean cultures such as the
Inca, Chancay and Nazca civilisations.
Such a tremendous loss of World heritage is not only a global loss but
also a big global issue. Many politicians worldwide are interested in maintaining their own interests, wealth and power. Many politicians who were
elected to represent their people have no vision and no respect to their
Editorial: Worries, Threats and a Catastrophe
people’s history. Without changing such attitudes, we may expect even
more fire and damage of our heritage and lives.
On 9th October, WAC President Koji Mizoguchi on behalf of the WAC
Council issued a statement on the fire in Rio de Janeiro museum that is
attached to this editorial.
Dangers on the Danube?
Universities and academies in Europe and the USA are urging the Hungarian government to withdraw proposed legislation that would effectively
ban courses in gender studies in both private and public institutions.
The Hungarian government says that it no longer wishes to accredit and
finance such study programmes due to the low number of graduates and a
poor track record of employability. These are obviously false, purposeful
and politically motivated assessments.
We believe that the Hungarian government should keep universities
independent from political, religious and ideological interests, and allow
researchers to make their own decision.
The Central European University (CEU) and Eötvös Loránd University
in Budapest (ELTE), the only institutions in Hungary that offer degrees in
gender studies accredited by the government, were not consulted in
advance and had less than 24 h to react to the decision taken without
them.
The ban is undoubtedly part of a series of recent attacks on academic
independence and a wider campaign against opposition to the government’s socially conservative policies. The current Hungarian government is
escalating their efforts to close or evict the Central European University
founded in 1991 by philanthropist George Soros on the principles of an
open society. CEU decided to continue recruiting students for its Budapest
campus, but a new site in Vienna will open for students in the 2019 academic year.
Now one recent personal experience (JT). Three Hungarian scholars
coming this summer to Prague for a conference had to refuse the university hotel accommodation as their state-run academic institution can only
reimburse accommodation in hotels that are on a government-approved
list. This is alarming! Should we worry?
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