Controlling the Past, Owning the Future
The Political Uses of Archaeology in the Middle East
The University of Arizona Press
What are the political uses—and misuses—of archaeology in the Middle East? In answering this question, the contributors to this volume lend their regional expertise to a variety of case studies, including the Taliban’s destruction of Buddhas in Afghanistan, the commercialization of archaeology in Israel, the training of Egyptian archaeology inspectors, and the debate over Turkish identity sparked by the film Troy, among other provocative subjects. Other chapters question the ethical justifications of archaeology in places that have “alternative engagements with the material past.” In the process, they form various views of the role of the archaeologist, from steward of the historical record to agent of social change.
The diverse contributions to this volume share a common framework in which the political use of the past is viewed as a process of social discourse. According to this model, political appropriations are seen as acts of social communication designed to accrue benefits to particular groups. Thus the contributors pay special attention to competing social visions and the filters these impose on archaeological data. But they are also attentive to the potential consequences of their own work. Indeed, as the editors remind us, “people’s lives may be affected, sometimes dramatically, because of the material remains that surround them.”
Rounding out this important volume are critiques by two top scholars who summarize and synthesize the preceding chapters.
The diverse contributions to this volume share a common framework in which the political use of the past is viewed as a process of social discourse. According to this model, political appropriations are seen as acts of social communication designed to accrue benefits to particular groups. Thus the contributors pay special attention to competing social visions and the filters these impose on archaeological data. But they are also attentive to the potential consequences of their own work. Indeed, as the editors remind us, “people’s lives may be affected, sometimes dramatically, because of the material remains that surround them.”
Rounding out this important volume are critiques by two top scholars who summarize and synthesize the preceding chapters.
Ran Boytner is the director for International Research at the Cotsen Institute of Archaeology at the University of California, Los Angeles, as well as an adjunct professor of anthropology at the University of Southern California. Lynn Swartz Dodd currently serves as a lecturer and curator for the Archaeological Research Collection at the University of Southern California. Bradley J. Parker is Assistant Professor of History at the University of Utah and author of The Mechanics of Empire.
1 Filtering the Past: Archaeology, Politics, and Change
Lynn Swartz Dodd and Ran Boytner
2 Heritage Politics: Learning from Mullah Omar?
Reinhard Bernbeck
3 Archaeology and Nationalism in Iraq, 1921–2003
Magnus T. Bernhardsson
4 Political Excavations of the Anatolian Past: Nationalism and Archaeology in Turkey
Aslı Gür
5 By the Rivers of Change: Strategists on the Heritage Front
Sandra Scham
6 Undermining the Edifice of Ethnocentric Historical Narrative in Israel with Community-Based Archaeology
David Ilan and Yuval Gadot
7 Who Owns the Past? The Role of Nationalism, Politics, and Profit in Presenting Israel’s Archaeological Sites to the Public
Ann E. Killebrew
8 Heritage Appropriation in the Holy Land
Adel H. Yahya
9 Exploring Heritage Discourses in Central Jordan
Danielle Steen, Jennifer Jacobs, Benjamin Porter, and Bruce Routledge
10 From Practical Knowledge to Empowered Communication: Field Schools of the Supreme Council of Antiquities in Egypt
Willeke Wendrich
11 Decolonizing Archaeology: Political Economy and Archaeological Practice in the Middle East
Susan Pollock
12 We Are All Middle Easterners Now: Globalization, Immanence, Archaeology
Yannis Hamilakis
13 Potential Abuses and Uses of the Remote Past in the Middle East (and Elsewhere)
Philip L. Kohl
Notes
Bibliography
About the Editors
About the Contributors
Index