| Joan M. Gero (Senior North
American Representative – American University,
Washington D.C.) jgero@american.edu
aper presented in the Presidential Session
‘Anthropology at the Millennium: Retrospectives
from the Discipline’s “Critical Centers”’,
organized by Paule Cruz Takash, American
Anthropological Association Meeting, November
18, 1999
Introduction
Since the immediate objects of archaeological
study are not human beings - but rather
material remains - archaeology has been
thought, by its practitioners and by others,
to lack a critical perspective in the modern
world - archaeology is perceived as a curiously
apolitical, ‘head-in-the-sand’ endeavour
with little relevance to contemporary social
and political life. So I appreciate
the chance to sit at this table, to put
forward the history of archaeology’s critical
agenda as a perspective that parallels others
discussed here and that also embraces the
silenced voices on anthropology’s transformative
journey.
Archaeology grew out of identical industrial
and capitalist roots as anthropology.
In fact in the second half of the 1800s,
archaeology emerged from the same sand pits
and limestone quarries, railroad beds and
factory foundations that displaced anthropology’s
first objects of study. Archaeology’s
parallel 20th century development has, like
anthropology, witnessed an increasingly
exclusionary trajectory of professionalization,
less and less diversity in the voices that
speak for the past, increased sidelining
of the descendent groups whose ancestors
and antecedents are of interest to archaeologists,
and greater convergence on single interpretative
stances.
At the same time, the international arrangements
of archaeology have allowed, encouraged,
and even insured the dominant nations exclusive
rights to mine the pasts of poorer and less
influential countries and, of course, to
tell the stories of these nations in generalized,
rationalized, scientized terms. The
oldest sites and the most splendid sites
are located in some of the poorest countries
in the world and are considered ‘world patrimony’,
reconstructed in non-native languages as
repositories of knowledge about MAN (in
general), while access to knowledge about
these sites is controlled - at least in
part - by the agendas, funding agencies
and cultural institutions of hegemonic nations
such as the United States and western Europe,
locking out other interpretive voices.
In fact, the modern global distribution
of archaeological research maps global power.
Archaeology underwrites, reasserts and reinforces
the present-day world order, and it is little
wonder that many First Nations people on
this continent, as well as indigenous peoples
on other continents, feel little affinity
for the goals and methods of archaeology.
Meanwhile, it has been commonplace for
practicing archaeologists in industrialized
centres to oppose the unseemly ‘insertion’
of politics into archaeology. Self-approving,
normative, unself-reflective, the archaeological
community often employs research models
that distance itself from knowledge production
and erase context, including the very perspective
that defines the relationship between subjects
and objects. Thus, archaeologists
can maintain that ‘archaeology has nothing
to do with politics; politics should be
left out of archaeology; archaeology pursues
facts about the past’ all the while that
archaeological organizations retain heavy
lobbying contingents in Washington D.C.,
involve few minorities and indigenous voices
in interpretations of the past, and while
the cover of a recent Society for American
Archaeology Bulletin features a photo of
the executive head of SAA standing with
Bruce Babbitt, Secretary of the U.S. Department
of the Interior! The politics of the
past may be invisible to those whose day
to day lives revolve around them, but they
form the very foundation for unequal access
to resources, and unequal awareness of,
and control over, one’s heritage.
Formation of the World Archaeological
Congress
An international forum for archaeological
research was first organized in 1931 with
the founding of the International Union
of Pre- and Proto-Historic Sciences (IUPPS).
Archaeology was largely restricted (at the
time) to Europe and to other small pockets
of the developed world, and the IUPPS was
- and continued to be - run by and for Western
European intellectuals. In fact, all
but one of its conferences have been held
in a major European city; its conferences
are organized around European perceptions
of archaeology; and Europeans dominate its
policy-making bodies. Although the
IUPPS is the ONLY organization with an international
responsibility for archaeology, other organizations
like the Pan-African Congress and the International
Congress of Americanisms arose with time
to compensate for the IUPPS’s geographic
bias.
It is not surprising, then, that IUPPS
planned its 11th International Congress
for Southhampton, England, to take place
in September 1986. But it was quite
a sensation when the local labor-dominated
city government of Southampton announced,
late in 1985, that it would withhold promised
financial support for IUPPS unless the IUPPS
disallowed South African and Namibian delegates
to participate. Against a backdrop
of growing violence in South Africa, and
in light of the United Nations cultural
and academic bans against Smith’s apartheid
regime, local Southampton conference organizers
upheld the city’s decision to ban South
African participants from the event.
Partly, they argued, the entire conference
would collapse financially if they did not
go along with the city ruling, but also,
they insisted, this was a moral issue, and
it was time for archaeology to recognize
its potential for contributing to change
in the present. IUPPS responded with
outrage, framing the issue as one of academic
freedom: “the conference had to be open
to all bona fide archaeologists and related
scientists with no distinction of race,
country or philosophical persuasion” (Clark
1989:214). The Society for American
Archaeology Executive Committee issued a
December 1985 statement to all its members
that “the SAA upheld, and will continue
to uphold, the principles of freedom of
research and the freedom of scholars from
all nations to meet and exchange ideas”
(cited in Hodder 1986:113-4).
In January 1986, after negotiations had
made it clear that no middle ground would
be accepted, the IUPPS Secretary-General
and Permanent Council met in Paris and disavowed
the Southampton conference. Most of
the IUPPS British Committee resigned further
involvement in the congress, and the media
had a heyday. Outraged headlines (not
only in Science and the Times Literary Supplement,
but also in Newsweek) pitched the battle
between academic freedom and the free practice
of science on one hand, and apartheid politics
on the other. All but a handful of
North American archaeologists withdrew papers
and cancelled their participation, and the
entire Israeli delegation withdrew, but
there was a flood of support from the Eastern
European block, Africa, India and South
America.
The North American boycott of the Southampton
conference can’t be seen as a simple litmus
test of righteous positions. Some
North Americans who defied the boycott and
came to Southampton were substantially ignorant
of the events that had lead to a new name
being attached to the congress, or they
were aware of what had transpired but figured
it just didn’t matter that much one way
or the other, while other North Americans
attended precisely because they embraced
the strong-minded political agenda held
to by the Southampton City Council.
By the same token, reasons for NOT attending
WAC1 ranged widely, including an informed
indignation on the parts of some North American
archaeologists who had worked in South Africa
and recognized that their excluded South
African colleagues were among the most active
and vociferous opponents to the apartheid
regime. Other North Americans pointed
to allegedly arbitrary and inconsistent
criteria in banning South Africans but not
participants from other countries whose
politics were thought abhorrent. Others
said that banning archaeologists, as opposed
to athletes, simply lacked the clout to
make this a meaningful action. Anger,
rancour, confusion and dismay were all apparent.
Still, the National Secretary of the Congress,
Peter Ucko, insisted on moving ahead with
a reorganized meeting under a new name,
the World Archaeological Congress (WAC),
no longer linked with the IUPPS. From
its inception, WAC emphasized its differences
from its antecedent institution. It
insisted on recognizing that science, far
from being politically neutral, constitutes
a value system linked to dominant social
interests, and the idea of science ‘being
open to all’ is ultimately a belief about
the way the world should be, rather than
how it is. WAC made clear statements
that archaeology had long served state interests
in shoring up nationalist identities and
asserting territorial domains. At
the same time, WAC put itself forward as
a forum not merely for professional archaeologists
and allied scientists, but for everyone
interested in the past, with native people
from underdeveloped countries specifically
encouraged to attend, their travel supported
by high registration fees from those who
could afford it. (A particularly controversial
action taken by WAC was to retain the registration
fees of withdrawn attendees, specifically
to fund attendance by people who could otherwise
not afford to come.)
Since 1986, WAC has constituted itself
as a uniquely representative non-profit
organization of worldwide archaeology that
recognizes the historical and social role,
and the political context, of archaeology,
and the need to make archaeological studies
relevant to the wider community. It
especially seeks to debate and refute institutionalized
views that serve the interests of a privileged
few to the detriment of disenfranchised
others. WAC explicitly values diversity
against institutionalized mechanisms that
marginalize the cultural heritage of indigenous
peoples, minorities and the poor.
A major function of WAC is to hold a major
international conference every four years:
in 1990 in Barquisimeto, Venezuela; in 1994
in New Delhi, India; and -coming full circle
from the first divisive congress - in 1999
in CapeTown, South Africa. In years
between major congresses, WAC has sponsored
regional thematic ‘InterCongresses’: in
1989, at Vermillion, South Dakota, “Archaeological
ethics and the treatment of the Dead”; in
1993 in Mombasa, Kenya, “Urban origins in
Africa”; in 1998 in Brac, Croatia, “The
destruction and restoration of cultural
heritage”; and planned InterCongresses expected
in the year 2001 in New Zealand on “Indigenous
issues and archaeology”, and in 2002 in
Curaçao in the Caribbean, on “Slavery in
the archaeological record”.
WAC’s agenda continues to grow. Working
without any permanent funds and with no
full-time staff, WAC solicits funds on a
project-to-project basis. Since WAC
was conceived in part because many less-advantaged
colleagues, indigenous caretakers of sites,
and concerned groups from around the world
were being excluded from international debate,
either from personal or institutional financial
situations, WAC has funded approximately
one third of the attendance at the major
conferences out of solicited funds and other
inscription fees. It has supported
the training of colleagues from less-developed
parts of the world with tutorial programs
and museum training. Resolutions passed
by the WAC Executive draw attention to local
archaeological communities trying to protect
archaeological sites, or indigenous groups
protecting sacred sites from industrial
encroachment or tourism development.
WAC was recently approached by the World
Commission on Dams (WCD) to create a panel
of experts for collaboration, working towards
the WCD Year 2000 Report regarding the effect
of dams and reservoirs on different cultural
heritage sites around the world, and WAC
is working on resolutions to address issues
of tourism, heritage and illicit traffic
in prehistoric artifacts. WAC communications
include the World Archaeological Bulletin,
as well as the 40+ volume-and-growing list
in the ‘One World Archaeology’ series, published
by Routledge and based on the proceedings
of the four World Archaeological Congresses
to date, which yield royalties to help representatives
attend congresses. In addition, a
new journal called Public Archaeology
is recently been launched with the editorial
board composed almost entirely of past WAC
Executive Officers.
Interestingly, in 1998 the newly-elected
Secretary-General of IUPPS initiated a meeting
with WAC officers about the possibility
of reintegration of the two organizations,
but the WAC Executive board ultimately rejected
this outcome on the grounds of on-going
incompatibility! Currently WAC is
exploring the possibility of NGO status
with UNESCO and is seeking operating funds
to run a permanent office and at least a
single full-time staff member to carry out
its activities.
Whither WAC? What comes out of
having more Voices?
The emergence of WAC in the world has established
and legitimated, and in turn been supported
and legitimated BY, a new kind of archaeology
-or archaeologies - sometimes called “value-committed
archaeologies” (P&H 1996: 526-527) or
‘engaged archaeology’. The call for
the reconstitution of archaeology in terms
of value commitment emerged immediately
after the first WAC conference (Shanks and
Tilley 1987), and since that time, value-committed
archaeology has taken many forms.
But all share an admission that archaeology
carries in it a source of empowerment, not
only in the generalized sense, as a means
of knowledge production about the past,
but more specifically as a means to grant
time-depth and legitimation to individuals,
groups or nations.
This turn toward admitting values in archaeology
- the acceptance that political commitment
and ethical judgement COUNT in archaeology
and constitute an important FOCUS of inquiry
- these programs carry serious consequences.
Epistemic implications suggest - and we
have started to see - an abandoning of the
rationalized, disembodied, uniform-ing systems
of knowledge that archaeology has regularly
imposed onto the intimate living traditions
of ancestors and sacredness, meaningful
history and oral stories of peoples on the
margins of state-level societies.
Multiple perspectives, multiple voices,
many interpretations can be accommodated,
and the once-hierarchical voice of Project
Director can, will and is learning to lay
out newly-complex, interactive and parallel
courses of investigation at single sites.
At the same time, indigenous and non-Western
groups are being encouraged and sometimes
required to participate from their own perspectives
rather than being spoken for through a paternalistic
or universalistic science (P&H 1996:527).
The Native American Graves Protection Act
(NAGPRA) has forced American Indian groups
to engage with archaeologists, learn federal
process and perform legalese speech-acts
to repossess the skeletal remains and sacred
objects of ancient burials, but interaction
is taking place, accords are being struck
and native voices are empowered to be involved
in archaeological research. Community-based
archaeology projects not only incorporate
local knowledge, history, education and
work schedules into research agendas, but
the very objectives of archaeological research
are now being set by local communities,
as ‘value committed’ archaeologists put
themselves at the service of endangered
ethnic minorities.
In fact this is the archaeology of the
future. The discipline of archaeology
is no longer the exclusive province of White,
European upper-class men, and there is no
going back to a pre-WAC era of exclusionary,
hierarchical and scientized knowledge that
marginalizes the multivocal archaeology
from the peripheries. The question
of ‘who controls the past?’ is no longer
a conundrum because it must be generally
conceded that there are many pasts and they
will be known differently from many views.
Further reading:
Archaeological Review from Cambridge
1985. Commentary. Archaeological
Review from Cambridge 4(2).
Clark, J. D. 1989. Review of
Ucko’s “Academic Freedom and Apartheid.”
American Antiquity 54:213-216.
Hassan, F. 1995. The World
Archaeological Congress in India: politicizing
the past. Antiquity 69:874-877.
Hodder, I. 1986. Politics and
Ideology in the World Archaeological Congress
1986. Archaeological Review from
Cambridge 5:113-119.
Kitchen, W. 1998. From Croatia
to Cape Town: the future of the World Archaeological
Congress. Antiquity 72:747-750.
Malone, C. and S. Stoddart 1999.
Editorial. Antiquity 73:1-12.
Thomas, J. 1998. Maintaining
the open space. Antiquity 72:
751-753.
Tierney, M. 1998. Treasures
buried by layers of hate. Times
Higher Education Supplement, 12 June,
1998.
Ucko, P. 1987. Academic
freedom and apartheid: the story of the
World Archaeological Congress.
London: Duckworth.
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