THIS VOLUME PRESENTS INNOVATIVE STUDIES OF HOW THE EMERGING
DISCIPLINES OF ARCHAEOLOGY AND ANCIENT HISTORY SHAPED THE MODERN
MIDDLE EAST, AND HOW THEY WERE IN TURN SHAPED BY COMPETING VISIONS AND
AGENDAS OF EMPIRES AND NEW NATIONS. The Middle East was a region
constructed through its putatively unique relationship to the whole
world's past-and its special relevance for the destiny of empires and
nations. Over the course of the nineteenth and early twentieth
centuries, European empires fought for influence and control over this
'cradle' of civilization, empire and monuments, and local powers and
people in the Middle East worked with and against these historical and
heritage frameworks in their own quests for self-determination.
In this volume, contributors from the fields of history, archaeology
and heritage explore how historical consciousness about the Middle
East was contested in the nineteenth and early twentieth century
through excavation and interpretation of the past. Chapters span West
Asia and North Africa, covering Turkey, Iraq, Iran, Syria, Lebanon,
Israel, Palestine, Egypt and Tunisia, and the imperial history of
Britain, France, Germany and the Ottoman Empire. The result is an
original contribution to our understanding of the origins and
influence of Middle Eastern archaeology, which resonates today in
contemporary discussions on heritage discourses and practices.
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Archaeology, Empires, Nations
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781350458703
Publisert
2024
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter