A mysterious gift from my desk June 20, 2008
Posted by argotnavis in Life.Tags: Mysterious, work
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I am not the first person who has sat at my desk at work. This is probably true for a lot of people, but I couldn’t think of anything better to open with. When I first got there it was relatively clean, but some of the previous occupants have left things behind. The stuffed purple bunny sitting on my monitor comes to mind. So, generally I’m not surprised if I find something near my desk that isn’t mine. The other day, however, was different. I was sitting, waiting for some pages to finish scanning, when I heard something fall on the ground. I looked down by my trashcan and saw this:
A packet of broccoli seeds. “That’s odd,” I thought to myself, and picked them up. Four things struck me as I looked at it. First, the packet is wrapped in packing tape. Second:
It is almost 30 years old. Third:
The packet was split in two and taped together so that it stands up on its own. I actually had it sitting on my desk for a few days thinking that it was just some sort of decoration. To be honest, I still have it sitting on my desk that way, even though I now know its true purpose. More on that later. Fourth:
The side opposite the broccoli has pictures of gulls on it. I wondered for some time about why someone would have made something like this, but eventually just accepted that maybe whoever made it really liked broccoli. My boss took a look at it, though, and figured it out pretty quickly.
Yeah, it’s a wallet. It’s sort of embarrassing that I didn’t realize that, considering I used to have a very similar wallet made of packing tape. She suggested I use it, but considering I lost a bank card and driver’s license when they fell out of my last tape wallet, I’m a bit reluctant. I think I’ll just keep it on my desk, and wonder where it fell from, and why it was there.
The music of the future, yesterday! June 18, 2008
Posted by argotnavis in Humor, Music, News.Tags: computers, Kenny G
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This is pretty cool. Obviously, computer-generated music recorded in 1951 isn’t going to sound amazing, but it’s still interesting to listen to, if only for historical reasons. Really, check out the clip in that story; the Mark I’s version of “In the Mood” is especially fun. The video farther down the page is also hilarious, but sadly it’s just a demonstration of the computer’s math skills, so there’s no music. Man, who would have guessed that one day computers would not only be playing music, but also writing music?
Who owns antiquities? June 16, 2008
Posted by argotnavis in Archaeology.Tags: archaeoblog, blogs, books, ethics, looting, museums
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Archaeology has a review by Roger Atwood of James Cuno’s Who Owns Antiquity? in their latest issue. This isn’t particularly breaking news — Looting Matters wrote about the book in late May (and there’s a link to a review from early May in the comments on that post) and Anthony over at ArchaeoBlog wrote about the Archaeology piece on Saturday, although I somehow missed it until I started writing up this post. You can read the whole thing if you click that link, and I haven’t actually read the book, so I’m not totally qualified to comment, so I just wanted to point out a few things that struck me as interesting.
‘What’s standing in the way are governments that illegitimately “claim ownership of the world’s ancient heritage” and practice what he calls identity control–the use of cultural property ownership laws to create and enforce a national identity based on what Cuno feels are spurious connections to the ancient past. “And archaeology and national museums are used as a means of enforcing that control,” he writes.’
I don’t entirely agree with what Cuno is saying here, especially since the “heritage” that governments are “claim[ing] ownership” of refers to the actual antiquities, and not the “who gets to say what about the past” issues that I initially thought this book would be about when I heard the title. I might have to read the book, because I’m curious as to how he justifies his position that American and European “encyclopedic museums” have at least as much claim to ownership as do the national museums of the countries these objects actually came from.
‘As for UNESCO itself, Cuno is clear. The United States should renounce the convention. He draws a parallel with the Bush administration’s decision to ignore international prohibitions on torture: “We know from the actions of the current Bush administration that long-standing international agreements, like the Geneva Convention, can be ignored or partially adhered to in the presumed national interest of the U.S.” The analogy with the Geneva Convention is more apt than he realizes. The information given by a prisoner while he is being tortured is unreliable. So is the information given by a looted antiquity; it has been wrenched from its archaeological context and stripped of its basic history. In certain instances, even its authenticity cannot be definitively ascertained.’
I think Atwood’s take on this is quite good. I hope I would have thought of the same thing had I not been so convinced I was taking crazy pills after reading Cuno’s apparent defense of ignoring the Geneva Conventions. Again, I think I have to read the book, because that must just sound bad out of context. Right?
‘What keeps looting going isn’t poverty or war, but market demand for antiquities. Although Cuno seems to understand this fact, he will not concede that it implicates buyers in the problem. But it does implicate them, and therein lies the fundamental dishonesty of his argument. He goes through the motions of deploring looting but then advocates the activities that cause it, suggesting it cannot be stopped–so why even try? Before long it’s clear that in Cuno’s mind, destruction of the archaeological record is a small price to pay for the enlargement of encyclopedic museums.’
To me, this pretty much hits the nail on the head. I think the argument here is, “Isn’t it better for something to be in a museum than a private collection?” Maybe so, but I don’t think museums should be directly contributing to the demand that keeps the illegal antiquities trade alive.
Anyway, it’s definitely an interesting read. Check it out.




