The Consumptive Ruins Archaeology of Consuming Past in the Middle East
After the collapse of Ottoman Empire and division of old Iran, the new geography of Middle East needed new identities. The ancient mythical past could not respond the new idea of identity anymore; because of that, the archaeological past replaced the mythical ones. All over the Middle East, the heav...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Archaeologies 2017-12, Vol.13 (3), p.435-459 |
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description | After the collapse of Ottoman Empire and division of old Iran, the new geography of Middle East needed new identities. The ancient mythical past could not respond the new idea of identity anymore; because of that, the archaeological past replaced the mythical ones. All over the Middle East, the heaven of archaeologists, was excavated; ancient ruins were recovered and redefined. In such a context, the archaeological evidences remained in the hands of Middle Easterner governments. During mid-1960–1970s, Pan Arabism and Pan Aryanism both raised in the region. In both Iran and Syria, the governments celebrated ancient empires. Such festivals have been known responsible for further fundamental thoughts relevant to archaeological past. The world witnessed the demolish of Palmyra ancient ruins by ISIS. Such an action is the other site of propagandist abuse of ancient ruins by governments. Both consume the past, and both try to redefine it: one in form of demolishing and the other in form of propaganda. In this article, the authors endorsed on various forms of consuming the past in the Middle East by opposition groups and by governments. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1007/s11759-017-9325-7 |
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subjects | Ancient civilizations Anthropology Archaeology Cultural Heritage Cultural history Cultural identity Geography Propaganda Social Sciences Turkish history |
title | The Consumptive Ruins Archaeology of Consuming Past in the Middle East |
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