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- Newsgroups: rec.arts.books
- Path: sparky!uunet!wupost!tulane!ukma!lunatix!lmollett
- From: lmollett@lunatix.uucp (Laura Mollett)
- Subject: Re: Cultural Appropriation and the New Age
- Organization: Lexington Public Access Unix. -KY- (606) 255-9121
- Date: Fri, 25 Dec 1992 04:29:34 GMT
- Message-ID: <1992Dec25.042934.11332@lunatix.uucp>
- References: <1992Dec23.192222.10975@netcom.com> <1992Dec24.023537.11215@panix.com> <1992Dec24.172929.13284@u.washington.edu>
- Lines: 45
-
- In article <1992Dec24.172929.13284@u.washington.edu> hoosiers@carson.u.washington.edu (Mary Loveless) writes:
- >
- [snip snip]
- >In response to Jim's question to Tom, "Does that bother you as well?"
- >Well, it bothers *me*, considering how many of those artifacts were
- >obtained. I recommend a couple of books for different views of this
- >question. I re-read Thor Heyerdahl's _Aku Aku_ a couple of years ago and
- >was fascinated at Heyerdahl's masterful techniques at charming/coercing
- >artifacts out of the Easter Islanders. When the islanders board ship at
- >first landing, Heyerdahl immediately decides the leader of the 'long-ears'
- >(read the book if you wish to find out more about this fascinating group)
- >is a clown and a buffoon. Heyerdahl ascends to greater heights of
- >condescending sneers toward this man and leaves the island in a state of
- >rage because he, out of all the islanders, does not turn over his family
- >heirlooms to the better care of the Europeans. The book is worth reading,
- >in part for this first person account of a mass looting (yes, the
- >artifacts were at risk because of the islanders' lack of knowledge about
- >proper care for them. I wonder if they would have been willing to learn?
- >I wonder if funds could have been raised to house and display them
- >properly, should the islanders have wanted to change age-old practices
- >that had saved their artifacts from the Spanish and other invaders?);
- >in part because it gives, I understand from those who know more about
- >these things than I, a truthful account of the history of an amazing
- >people.
- >
- >Another book I heartily recommend is Tony Hillerman's mystery, _Talking
- >God_, in which (among many other things) a Navajo wannabe, a blond,
- >blue-eyed Smithsonian staffer with a drop of Navajo blood (he wears
- >*braids* for heavens sake. Read the book to find out why that is silly),
- >who expresses his views about museum artifacts in a dramatic way. Tony
- >Hillerman's books are recommended to our graduate students who do their
- >nursing clinical practicum at the Navajo Reservation, because they give
- >such an accurate picture of Navajo people and their lives. The Navajos
- >have given Hillerman some kind of award, because of his books. I wonder
- >if it is safe to assume that they don't feel that *he* is yet *another*
- >looter (see _Thief of Time_. **fascinating**).
-
- Another good book about the "looting" of artifacts by archeologists and the
- like from "civilised" countries is _Foreign Devils on the Silk Road_ by Peter
- Hopkirk (The Search for the Lost Cities and Treasures of Chinese Central
- Asia) (Univ of Mass. Press, 1980). A fascinating read. My husband refers
- to this as the book containing the REAL Indiana Jones.
- Laura Mollett
-
-
-