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Archaeological heritage in the age of digital colonialism

Autor
Stobiecka, Monika
Data publikacji
2020
Abstrakt (EN)

Digital archaeologists claim that their practices have proven to be an important tool for mediating conflict, ensuring that the digital turn in archaeology entails engaging in current political issues. This can be questioned by analysing a copy of the Syrian Arch of Triumph. The original was destroyed in 2015. A year later, a copy was carved out of Egyptian marble; the replica was constructed thanks to digital documentation, which allowed archaeologists to create a 3D model. The arch was placed in various Western locations; however, it never reached Syria. Hybridity, the cultural and political significance of the arch’s replica and its ‘Grand Tour’ invite us to think about different interpretive layers of this artefact of ideological discourse (ontological, epistemological, ethical). In this paper, the replica of the Syrian arch will be analysed through the frameworks of post-colonial theory and technology studies. Both perspectives provide an insight into promising advantages and alarming drawbacks of such digital practices. This paper argues that the case of a copy of the Syrian Arch of Triumph on the one hand reflects the contemporary colonial technocracy in heritage politics (an ethical dimension), and on the other demonstrates that an ideological aspect of its digital reconstruction emerges from a speculative anticipation of what might constitute the universal value of world heritage in the future (an onto-epistemological dimension).

Słowa kluczowe EN
post-colonial heritage, nomadic heritage, critical heritage studies, digital archaeology, hybridity, Syrian arch, Palmyra
Dyscyplina PBN
archeologia
Czasopismo
Archaeological Dialogues
Tom
27
Zeszyt
2
Strony od-do
113-125
ISSN
1380-2038
Data udostępnienia w otwartym dostępie
2020-11-13
Licencja otwartego dostępu
Uznanie autorstwa