Christie's |
[something undefined] is all about context. Not the context of the happenstance of objects at an archaeological site: a place that is in present time where objects persist, or have been lost to decay; a place that combines what was deliberate with what was accidental; where meaning must be applied, itself, filtered through the experience of the observer. That is micro-context. I am talking about macro-context: that which is closer to historical research. The historian, even when focusing on a single document must bring many another documents into play. If the historian fails to do this then subjectivity is given free rein.Since the antiquarian fellow mentions documents, here are what collectors and dealers do to documents. This is lot 42 from a recent sale at reputable auction house (Christie's). These are not so much dugup as cut-out. The "collecting history" is rather vague: "Europe". I am not sure what sort of reputation one would be aiming for selling such dismembered artefacts as these with such scanty information about how they got on the market in such a condition, from where were these leaves cut out by whom and why? How do we know that were not surreptitiously removed in an Italian monastery backroom if the best the seller can do is "from Europe"? Anyhow, here they are:
Collectors' manuscripts (Christie's) |
cleric, ruler, box, stick |
I'll not bother to explain here (the PAS can do it, that's what they are paid for) that the collector's definition of an archaeological site as merely "a place that is in present time where objects persist..." really misses the point.
Indeed, the Antiquarian Fellow cuts-and-pastes just below the passage above a fragment of a text by Colin Haselgrove, a quote he patronisingly admits is an important "principle" in the "archaeology of Celtic coins" (I am sure the professional numismatists would say this is part of "numismatics"):
"On their own, a collection of Iron Age coins from a particular site can only tell us so much It is commonplace among numismatists that to interpret particular features of a given collection, we need a knowledge of the normal pattern of coin losses found on sites in the region"Well, maybe I am missing something here, but does this not say that a heap of decontextualised coins from goodness-knows-where on a table which cannot be assigned to a site means the destruction of precisely that sort of information which is so "important" to the study of the coins? An assemblage of coins from a site cannot be interpreted in any way at all (except the pictures and writing on them, like the umbrella in a box pictures above) unless we know how representative they are of the material on that site and we know something of the appearance of other secure assemblages from other sites in the region (and beyond).
Decontextualisation therefore leads to the loss of at least two types of information:
1) How the object came on the market and why it is not somewhere else.
2) allowing the object to be interpreted in a variety of ways besides the "it looks like" (spot-the-difference) kind.
Simples as they say. But I expect the simpletons (FSAs among them) will continue arguing, but basically we can all see that this is because they are incapable of grasping what it is we are discussing.
BTW here's a few more details on the Harley manuscript, I cannot really add much to the cut-up one sold off by Christies' which is the product of pure unmitigated destruction and possibly a motor for more of this kind. Like the selling of decontextualised artefacts no-questions-asked to collectors like "John Hooker FSA".
DCI Jones: "Did you make a note of how that gun we found at the crime scene was positioned next to the body, sealed it in an evidence bag and sent it to the lab to be analysed, constable?"
ReplyDeletePC Hooker: "I didn't think it was important, sir. The crime scene was only 'micro-context'. I've cleaned all those nasty fingerprints and bloodstains off it, compared it to lots of other guns illustrated in books and put it in a nice new display case so we can admire it. It's the 'macro-context' that counts."
DCI Jones: "Is the gun still loaded, constable?"
PC Hooker: "I don't know, sir. Why?"
DCI Jones: "Because I'm going to shoot you with it."
Yes, it is pretty pathetic, isn't it? Now, how long do you think we'll have to wait before a SINGLE British archaeologist (you know, the ones who are in a "partnership" with collectors like Mr Hooker and the Nonymous Second Generation Detectorist) begin a discussion with the Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries about archaeological evidence? One day more, two? After all, we have a huge expensive outreach scheme which is supposed to be to "raising awareness among the public of the educational value of archaeological finds in their context and facilitate research in them", haven't we? How actually are they going about doing that if they leave online stuff like this written by FSAs unchallenged/unexplained? WHERE is their outreach, and in what way are they actually making more of a contribution to the public's knowledge of ARCHAEOLOGY than Mr Hooker posting up other people's detecting finds and "saying what they mean"? [Do you see a pattern here by any chance?] Is it actually rocket science? Or are they (all fifty of them) just BODGING it and dropping the ball? Ridiculous.
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