Hostname: page-component-7c8c6479df-fqc5m Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-03-17T23:50:50.873Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Archaeological heritage in the age of digital colonialism

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 November 2020

Monika Stobiecka*
Affiliation:
Faculty of ‘Artes Liberales’, University of Warsaw, Warsaw, Poland
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Digital archaeologists claim that their practices have proven to be an important tool for mediating conflict, ensuring that the digital turn in archaeology entails engaging in current political issues. This can be questioned by analysing a copy of the Syrian Arch of Triumph. The original was destroyed in 2015. A year later, a copy was carved out of Egyptian marble; the replica was constructed thanks to digital documentation, which allowed archaeologists to create a 3D model. The arch was placed in various Western locations; however, it never reached Syria. Hybridity, the cultural and political significance of the arch’s replica and its ‘Grand Tour’ invite us to think about different interpretive layers of this artefact of ideological discourse (ontological, epistemological, ethical). In this paper, the replica of the Syrian arch will be analysed through the frameworks of post-colonial theory and technology studies. Both perspectives provide an insight into promising advantages and alarming drawbacks of such digital practices. This paper argues that the case of a copy of the Syrian Arch of Triumph on the one hand reflects the contemporary colonial technocracy in heritage politics (an ethical dimension), and on the other demonstrates that an ideological aspect of its digital reconstruction emerges from a speculative anticipation of what might constitute the universal value of world heritage in the future (an onto-epistemological dimension).

Type
Discussion Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2020. Published by Cambridge University Press.

The Buddhas of Bamiyan in Afghanistan; Aleppo, Bosra and Damascus in Syria; Hatra and Ashur in Iraq are only a few examples of World Heritage sites destroyed during recent serious military conflicts or acts of terrorism. When heritage is threatened as a result of politics, more and more specialists try to find remedies for the inevitable loss. Those tragedies raise awareness of and for heritage also among the general public. The press all over the world are constantly delivering worrying notices on monuments and archaeological sites under threat of contemporary politics.

Archaeologists are particularly interested in and vocal during heated debates on endangered heritage. Their active engagement in current discussions and practices of saving and protecting heritage is immensely inspired by the quick development of new technologies for heritage. The switch from analog to digital in archaeology and a visible shift of focus from destructive practices characteristic of traditional academic archaeology (Schnapp Reference Schnapp1996, 18) to non-invasive digital and cyber interventions (Forte 2007; 2010; Reference Forte, Remondino and Campana2014; Favro Reference Favro, Bond and Houston2013; Earl Reference Earl2013; Edgeworth Reference Edgeworth, Carusi, Hoel, Webmoor and Woolgar2015; Roosevelt et al. Reference Roosevelt, Cobb, Moss, Olson and Ünlüsoy2015; Huggett 2015; Reference Huggett2017; Lercari et al. Reference Lercari, Shulze, Wendrich, Porter, Burton, Levy, Catalano and De Luca2016; Levy et al. Reference Levy, Smith, Najjar, DeFanti, Yu-Min Lin and Kuester2012; Beale and Reilly Reference Beale and Reilly2017; Perry Reference Perry2018) have contributed to the development of a new form of archaeology: digital and cyber rescue archaeology.

Digital and cyber archaeologists generate immense data on endangered heritage (Lercari et al. Reference Lercari, Shulze, Wendrich, Porter, Burton, Levy, Catalano and De Luca2016), create databases and alternative forms of digital heritage (Brown Reference Brown, Cameron and Kenderdine2007; Berggren et al. Reference Berggren, Dell’Unto, Forte, Haddow, Hodder, Issavi, Lercari, Mazzucato, Mickel and Taylor2015; Cooper and Green Reference Cooper and Green2016; Dawson and Reilly Reference Dawson and Reilly2019), and propose new working patterns for protection and preservation of archaeological monuments and sites (Levy et al. Reference Levy, Smith, Najjar, DeFanti, Yu-Min Lin and Kuester2012; Jones and Levy Reference Jones, Levy, Levy and Jones2018). Complex technological tools and expanding computer-based skills are being gathered together in new institutional frameworks. More and more, however, mainly Western universities and archaeological faculties are launching dedicated digital and cyber labs; many of them are focused solely on endangered heritage. Western scholars also establish non-profit organizations dedicated to the protection of heritage threatened by destruction. To list just two of these: CyArk (a non-profit organization from Oakland),Footnote 1 and the Center for Cyber-Archaeology and Sustainability (University of San Diego).Footnote 2 Numerous actions are undertaken daily, monthly, yearly to protect and preserve heritage for future generations. However important they are, these practices rarely trigger critical discussion.

The digitization itself raises important questions and serious concerns. Born from military improvement and enhanced during wartime (Brahm Reference Brahm, Brahm and Driscoll1995; Chambers and Terranova Reference Chambers and Terranova2014; Stingl Reference Stingl2016), still funded by the military and state agencies, digital technologies have an ambiguous status. As Bernard Stiegler (Reference Stiegler2016) suggests, using the term pharmacon, technology may be a poison and a cure at the same time. Noting an internal tension within digital technologies applied to protect heritage, archaeologists and heritage specialists should be especially aware and open to theoretical reflection and deep criticism. This, unfortunately, does not happen in every case. Several digital archaeologists themselves point out that digital and cyber-archaeology is under-theorized (Dallas Reference Dallas2015; Huggett Reference Huggett2015; Huvila and Huggett Reference Huvila and Huggett2018; Perry Reference Perry2018; Carter Reference Carter2019; cf. general lack of theory in digital studies: Simanowski Reference Simanowski2016) and many researchers in the field have no deeper understanding of their tasks (Huvila and Huggett Reference Huvila and Huggett2018, 88, cf. Coppelstone and Dunne Reference Coppelstone and Dunne2017). Digital archaeology has been accused of ‘of being technocratic, apolitical and indifferent to social and cultural concerns and of relating poorly with theoretical orientations currently found in archaeology’ (Dallas Reference Dallas2015, 177–178). Dealing with heritage at risk might be called ‘archaeodiplomacy’ (Lercari et al. Reference Lercari, Shulze, Wendrich, Porter, Burton, Levy, Catalano and De Luca2016, 1); however, even this notion rarely, if ever, encourages critical perspectives and profound theoretical reflections on heritage politics in the digital era, the meaning of digital heritage, the status of digital archaeological records, or their role in and for different societies (cf. Brown Reference Brown, Cameron and Kenderdine2007; Morgan and Pallascio Reference Morgan and Pallascio2015). Digital archaeology has been used largely to avoid the politics and ethics of dealing with difficult questions concerning the field of heritage studies.

In this paper, I would like to investigate a post-colonial and neo-colonial discursive potential of the debates on digital heritage. I wish to address the following research questions: what is digital heritage? What is the political role of digital heritage? What is the cultural and spatial setting for digital heritage? Who is producing digital heritage, and where? To whom is digital heritage addressed? And finally, who owns digital heritage?

The last question echoed in multiple discussions concerning the reduced-scale copy of the Syrian arch (Burch Reference Burch2017; Munawar Reference Munawar2017; Khunti Reference Khunti2018). The copy of the Syrian Arch of Triumph re-created in several Western locations after the original arch was destroyed in Syria in 2015 will illustrate also my arguments. I will place my considerations within the frameworks of post-colonial theory (Bhabha Reference Bhabha1994; Young Reference Young1995; Gilroy Reference Gilroy2004; Coronil Reference Coronil, Stoler, McGranahan and Perdue2007; Spivak Reference Spivak2013; Chakrabarty et al. Reference Chakrabarty, Wickramasinghe, Robbe, Modest and Mark2016) and its reception in archaeological and heritage studies. My interpretation will be an attempt to tackle multifaceted problems that are inscribed on contemporary digital heritage. I will treat a digital archaeological object, represented by the copy of the Syrian arch, as an embodiment of hybridity – material/digital translation inherited the ‘otherness’ of the ‘digital’ (Brahm Reference Brahm, Brahm and Driscoll1995). I will try to see digital heritage as an onto-epistemological reflection on the contemporary nomadism inherent in the production of such representations that are designed to move across political spaces (Braidotti 1994; 2006; Reference Braidotti2013). Further on, I will focus on the ethical issues that stem from the post- and neo-colonial interpretation of the ‘Grand Tour’ that the Syrian arch has gone through in recent years. Following Ömür Harmanşah, I will use the notion of ‘artefacts of ideological discourse’ (Harmanşah Reference Harmanşah2015, 173) as the mirrors reflecting the contemporary iconoclash (Latour Reference Latour, Latour and Weibel2002). Digital heritage objects treated as artefacts of ideological discourse will allow me to reflect on what Harmanşah describes after Latour as an iconoclash – ‘the contemporary and perpetual image wars in the public sphere, both destructive and constructive and driven by advanced technologies of capitalist hypermodernity, new media mobilisation, and the global economy of the extensive consumption and regeneration of violent imagery’ (Harmanşah Reference Harmanşah2015, 176). I will rework and adjust this definition to consider the post- and neo-colonial character of an insufficiently self-critical or reflexive application of technologies for the (re-)creation of digital archaeological heritage. I am going to claim that a neo-colonial form of oppression, visible through the story of the Syrian arch copy, is sanctioned by a revisited version of the institutionalized heritage dogma: the technocracy (Meskell Reference Meskell2018, 59–89). At the same time, the case of a copy of the Syrian Arch of Triumph demonstrates that the ideological aspect of its digital reconstruction emerges from a speculative anticipation of what might constitute the universal value of world heritage in the future. Therefore the idea of ‘universal value’ which is based on temporal universality (valuable is what is defined as such in the 20th and 21st centuries) goes against the universality of place and space (digital reconstructions and artefacts might be presented everywhere). In this way, digital archaeological heritage might potentially be considered ‘planetary heritage’ (Gilroy 2001; Reference Gilroy2004; Spivak Reference Spivak2013; Moraru Reference Moraru2015; Chakrabarty et al. Reference Chakrabarty, Wickramasinghe, Robbe, Modest and Mark2016) rather than only world heritage.

Copy/paste/relocate: a case of the Syrian Arch of Triumph

The Arch of Triumph, or the Arch of Septimius Severus, was a Roman ornamental archway in Palmyra, Syria. It was built in the 3rd century A.D. during the reign of the emperor Septimius Severus as an imperial marker of Roman domination in the province (Ward-Perkins Reference Ward-Perkins1992). During ancient times, the Syrian arch, together with hundreds of other arch monuments constructed across the Roman provinces, represented a powerful impact of Roman conquest and marked the geopolitical borders of empire (Cassibry Reference Cassibry2018). Read from today’s perspective, the Syrian arch was a sign of colonial dominance and imperial power that resonated throughout the history of architecture, while arches with a similar political message reappeared in the Renaissance and in the 18th and 19th centuries (Dietler Reference Dietler and Stein2005, 44). As a part of the urban architecture of an ancient city, it was widely appreciated and became one of the touristic emblems of Palmyra. Thanks to international archaeological missions it was scrupulously documented (Elcheikh Reference Elcheikh2019), which turned out to be invaluable when the arch was intentionally destroyed by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) in 2015.

Almost a year after this dramatic event, the Institute for Digital Archaeology created a copy of the arch which in April 2016 was set up at Trafalgar Square, London. A few months later, in September 2016, the arch travelled overseas to New York City, where it was placed at the City Hall Park. In February 2017 the copy of the arch was welcomed in Dubai at the World Government Summit. The arch travelled to Italy for one month at the end of March 2017. It was an important landmark in Florence, where the G7 summit had taken place.Footnote 3 At the end of April 2017 the arch was moved to Arona, Italy, where it was presented at the opening of a museum named after Khaled al-Asaad, the Syrian archaeologist and curator of the Palmyra Museum, who lost his life during dramatic events at the archaeological site of Palmyra. The next stop on the arch’s tour was Washington, DC, where it was exhibited in September 2018. In 2019 the copy was moved to Switzerland. It was exhibited in Geneva in April during the commemoration of 20 years of the Second Protocol to the Hague Convention, and in Bern in June during the 70th anniversary of Switzerland’s commitment to UNESCO. Until now, the last stop in the arch’s ‘Grand Tour’ was Neimënster Abbey in Luxembourg in December 2019, when the arch stood to mark Luxembourg’s quarter-century of UNESCO membership.

From its very beginnings, the arch raised multiple questions and controversies. Most of them were summed up by a British archaeologist, Zena Kamash (Reference Kamash2017), who conducted a related project at the same time when the replica of the arch was presented in London (Brown Reference Brown2016). Kamash’s project, ‘Postcard to Palmyra’, was a public-archaeology initiative that invited people to write postcards about the copy of the arch when it was exhibited in London. Kamash gathered a great amount of interesting material, which showed that more than a half of responses were positive about the replica; the rest expressed mixed (22 per cent) or negative (18 per cent) feelings. Kamash analysed the main fields of concern, which could be summed up as the aim of the replica, technology/information and setting.

The first thought-provoking and problematic issue related to the replica appears while reading the Western press. At the same time, the arch’s tour was not widely commented on by the Syrian press. The Syrian Arab News Agency (SANA) mentioned only the first showcase of the replica in London, posting merely a YouTube link.Footnote 4 Similarly, the Middle East monitor dedicated only a six-sentence mention to the first display of the replica.Footnote 5 The rest of showcases were not commented on. What was central to the news I read was rather the reopening of the archaeological site of Palmyra for tourists. SANA presented 17 press releases only from 2019. The Western press devoted many notices to the first and second showcases of the replica. However, multiple articles did not provide comprehensive information on how exactly the copy was created. Kamash comments on this issue and emphasizes that, contrary to how the news media presented this story, the replica was not printed on a 3D printer (Kamash Reference Kamash2017, 613–615; cf. Basulto Reference Basulto2016; Jalabi Reference Jalabi2016; Saunders Reference Saunders2017). The technological information was barely understood by journalists and the public at large; however, it is worth stressing that almost all of the popular-press articles about the replica of the Syrian arch were strongly techno-optimistic and techno-enthusiastic (Basulto Reference Basulto2016; Saunders Reference Saunders2017). The replica itself was prepared through state-of-the-art 3D technology. This technological method consists of creating a 3D model in dedicated software or from a 3D scan, then an algorithm cuts the model into 2D slices, which are printed one after another (Ma, Li and Yang 2018). As Kamash explains, the replica was machine-cut from a block of marble using a digital model as the template (Kamash Reference Kamash2017, 615). In this case, the importance of advanced digital technologies in the creation of the replica was strongly exaggerated due to misunderstanding and/or lack of information. The Institute of Digital Archaeology did not provide information on the technology, nor on makers, funders or the actual cost of the arch when it was exhibited in London (or elsewhere), which is criticized by Kamash (Reference Kamash2017), Stuart Burch (Reference Burch2017), Roshni Khunti (Reference Khunti2018) and the Factum Foundation (discussed in Khunti Reference Khunti2018).

The accusations that the replica was ‘a grotesque Duchampian readymade that is the fulfilment of ISIS’s wishes’ (Burch Reference Burch2017, 72), or that it was ‘disneyficated’, unethical and unjust towards what had happened to Syrians (Khunti Reference Khunti2018) were not isolated voices of disapproval. I heard similar opinions at the Digital Heritage Congress 2018 in San Francisco. The case of the Syrian arch appeared several times during the debates, mostly in ethical contexts concerning the monetization of heritage, data flows and copyrights. The problem of the data used to create a 3D model turned out to be especially enigmatic. During the discussions in San Francisco, archaeologists and digital specialists mentioned that the Institute of Digital Archaeology copyrighted the replica of the arch. This, of course, undermines the rules of free data flow and accessibility, and moreover the idea of public, universal heritage. Participants at the conference shared other experiences with the arch and its makers, stating that the Institute of Digital Archaeology did not share the data. This problem also runs contrary to the unspoken rules of the digital revolution, which are open-access, open-source and transparency (cf. Wilson and Michalak Reference Wilson and Michalak2015). Khunti resolved part of those doubts, explaining that the Million Image Database project launched by the Institute of Digital Archaeology to gather more photos of the arch was a voluntary work of people who risked their lives to capture the rubble of the arch (Khunti Reference Khunti2018, 8). Khunti notes the blasé attitude of the Institute of Digital Archaeology, whose acts in this case ‘could potentially endanger lives’ (ibid.).

Those debates, placed somewhere between capitalization, the politicization of heritage and digital ethics, encouraged me to personally contact the Institute of Digital Archaeology. Noting the sparse communication of the Institute of Digital Archaeology’s executives on the official website and on Twitter, I could not find answers to questions that bothered me and were related to the widely understood agency of the replica itself. I was able to get in touch with a representative secretary, after submitting a message on the official website of the Institute of Digital Archaeology. I received an answer stating that I would be contacted by the director of technology, Alexy Karenowska, but unfortunately I was left with no further answer. The questions that I sent, hoping that they would be forwarded to Karenowska, touched upon issues of data (using only their own data, data on Creative Commons licenses or other open licenses, data from international databases, an exchange of data), upon the replica’s ‘Grand Tour’ (is the arch being ‘rented’ by different agendas? Who is the ‘owner’ of the arch? Who makes decisions about its future destination?), and finally upon whether the arch is going to be exhibited in Syria.

The last question that I wanted to pose to the staff working at the Institute of Digital Archaeology is of particular importance to this paper. It is not only the question of the final destination, but rather a question of multi-spatiality – locations that go with specific politics and cultural settings. The question of politics and settings places this debate in a broader framework of conflict archaeology. As Kamash underlines throughout her extensive research, the grand opening of the arch at Trafalgar Square was an immensely political event. The British archaeologist quotes several postcards, where e.g. the arch is being welcomed in a civilized (my emphasis) world. On the other cards, one can read that the copy may feel colonial or oriental. As Kamash herself states, ‘Trafalgar Square, with its monuments to Nelson, military might and the monarchy, is a notoriously imperial space, and yet also strongly associated with protest and anti-imperialism, leading to it being described as a “paradox” and even “schizophrenic”’ (Kamash Reference Kamash2017, 616). This brief description of the technology used for creating the arch and the geopolitical struggles inscribed in it set introductory points for my further onto-ethical reflections.

The digital ‘Other’

The Institute of Digital Archaeology does not provide full information on the exact makers of the arch; however, the presentation of the team, consisting of a magnetician, an analyst, historians and classical archaeologists, suggests that those might have been the project’s participants.Footnote 6 The replica of the Syrian arch was brought to life thanks to digital technologies. No hands were needed to carve the elements of the arch in Egyptian marble – the work was delegated to multiple technological agents: computers, software, models, machinery. However, the effect of that intense digital work is material – a tangible, touchable, solid, 11-ton weighted copy of an arch. In itself, it is neither a ‘real’ object – the ‘real’ Arch of Triumph standing in Palmyra – nor a virtual or digital ephemeral scan or another record in a database. As Maurizio Forte (Reference Forte, Cameron and Kenderdine2007, 391–392) suggests, those two are not opposed ontologies, but parallel ones, and in this case they entangle in the figure of the ‘real’ digital material copy. So the replica may be seen as a hybrid, a product of multiple transformations: from an authentic, original, material object into a digital model, and eventually to a material, hyper-realistic, yet reduced-scale, copy. According to Homi K. Bhabha, the hybrid moment, thus ‘the transformational value of change[,] lies in the rearticulation, or translation, of elements that are neither the Onenor the Other … but something else besides, which contests the terms and territories of both’ (Bhabha Reference Bhabha1994, 41, original emphasis). The rise of the hybrid is the moment of negotiation between different boundaries and representations (ibid., 41–43). Similarly, the replica becomes a hybrid, following Bhabha’s definition. As in a case of post-colonial identities being excluded from strict categories, the idea of digital heritage does not fit standard terms that we use to describe heritage. A digitally copied object is neither an original (‘the One’, or even ‘the normative’, ‘the traditional’, or simply ‘the material’), nor is it the facsimile (‘the Other’, ‘the new’, ‘the modern’, or ‘the digital’). It shares features with both, but it is never one or the other. The replica is material and tangible; however, it is not original and authentic (discussed in Burch Reference Burch2017; Munawar Reference Munawar2017; Khunti Reference Khunti2018). At the same time it was created digitally, but it is not immaterial (Buchli Reference Buchli2016). This hybrid is born out of a clash between ‘the One’ (material and authentic) and ‘the Other’ (digital and technological); it contests valid categories that we use to describe monuments and artefacts. Hybridity, understood in this way, invites one to create a rupture, to match together unlike things, ‘calling attention to disjunctions and conjuctions’ (Liebmann Reference Liebmann and Card2013, 30).

The replica is in itself a translation from the ‘real’ to the ‘unreal’, a negotiation between the ‘original One’ and the digital ‘Other’. As an object it may seem uncanny, weird, unusual, imaginary, sanitized, alienated – and certainly as lying between the ‘well-known’ tradition (the Western concept of heritage) and the ‘Other’ (a copy, something that is unfamiliar for thinking about heritage). ‘It is better to fail in originality than to succeed in imitation’; in other words, the common public will always see something normatively ‘worse’ in a copy. This notion was easily observable in Kamash’s research. Her respondents stated that the replica lacks the authenticity of being real, that it is too small or too big, or simply that it does not look aesthetically pleasing (Kamash Reference Kamash2017, 68). Indeed, the copy does not have any specific marks, traces or material features indicating its age, does not bear any signs of pastness (Holtorf Reference Holtorf2013). Without pastness the object seems to be a sanitized version of the ‘real’ that tends to be difficult to engage with (Jeffrey Reference Jeffrey2015, 145). This ‘sterilization of the past’ (Shanks Reference Shanks1998), seen as uncanny and unfamiliar, indicates yet another attempt to praise the attachment to Western ideas of monuments and heritage as original, fragmentary, ancient, burdened with Benjamin’s aura that suggests the original’s uniqueness and duration, as opposed to the copy’s transience and reproducibility (Jeffrey Reference Jeffrey2015; Jones Reference Jones2017; Jones et al. Reference Jones2017).

However, the act of translation, the-becoming-of-a-hybrid, brings it agency and a certain value. A transformational value, becoming a hybrid form of heritage, is, according to Fiona Cameron (Reference Cameron, Cameron and Kenderdine2007, 57),

an active process of value and meaning-making equivalent to that of the physical object. It enacts the curatorial process of selection of what is significant, what should be remembered and forgotten, and what categories of meaning such as classification, cultural values, or aesthetic attributes are given pre-eminence. And the value of the ‘real’ increases when digitised, enhancing its social, historical, and aesthetic importance, owing to the resources required in the compilation of a 3D rendering, and through distribution.

The copy in this context is not only about itself, but also about the original as the main reference point. Somehow it resembles the classical structure of postcolonial reasoning, where the Other is always described in the opposition to the Western.

This hybrid form of an ‘almost-original’ replica of the Syrian arch encourages us to rethink the values that we usually inscribe in the concept of heritage. As a negotiated space it pushes us to think about what is in between. Robert C. Young (Reference Young1995, 19) adds that hybridity suggests the necessity of revising normative estimates. This new form of translated, hybrid heritage creates an important space for negotiation that is formed by flows of information, constant shifts and contestation of values and common thinking (Gunkel Reference Gunkel2006; cf. Haraway Reference Haraway1991).

Nomadic heritage

The replica, in this sense, can be seen as a form of nomadic heritage (cf. Harrison, Appelgren and Bohlin Reference Harrison, Appelgren, Bohlin and Hamilakis2018) that correlates with the nomadic theory proposed by Rosi Braidotti (1994; 2006; Reference Braidotti2013) and echoes Maurizio Forte’s reflection on the cultural nomadism of heritage (Reference Forte, Cameron and Kenderdine2007).

Braidotti defines nomadic subjectivity as contrary to homogeneity, underlining that subjectivity is defined in terms of ‘processes of becoming’ (Braidotti Reference Braidotti2006, 41). Mutating and dynamic subjectivity may help in defining new ideas and affects. The dynamism that characterizes a nomad subject as opposed to standardized patterns invites one to revise conventions (Braidotti Reference Braidotti2006, 28–29). In this sense, Braidotti’s theory encourages one to rethink contemporary heritage, artefacts and effects of digital works in archaeology (cf. Forte Reference Forte and Forte2010, 10). Migrating artefacts and objects, translated from material to digital form, semi-original hybrids supplemented by digital or cyber aids, are results of care over cultural heritage threatened by conflict and war (Rico 2008; 2014a; Reference Rico, Lafrenz-Samuels and Rico2015; Meskell Reference Meskell2018), but also natural disasters (Rico 2014b; 2016; Reference Rico2020), Anthropocenic effects (cf. Solli et al. Reference Solli, Burström, Domanska, Edgeworth, González-Ruibal, Holtorf, Lucas, Oestigaard, Smith and Witmore2011; Harrison, Appelgren and Bohlin Reference Harrison, Appelgren, Bohlin and Hamilakis2018) and risk societies (Shanks Reference Shanks2012, 32).

There are four boundary conditions for nomadic heritage. First of all, nomadic heritage is in motion. Objects like the copy of the Syrian arch are mobile and transferable; they can be placed everywhere as they are digital and/or material. As ‘wandering heritage’ they might be considered parallel to the nomadic nature of contemporary social systems (Braidotti Reference Braidotti2013) – heritage moves when people are in motion. An idea of ‘migrating heritage’ as a reflection on the heritage of third-culture kids (descendants of parents who had been changing countries when their children were young) is vocalized by Laia Colomer (Reference Colomer2017). Colomer tackles the problems of globalization, deterritorialization and self-identification with heritage. She notes that more and more societies are being defined as nomad, migrating, in motion; thus she concludes that ‘mobility encompasses multiple paths, multiple directions, and multiple relocations. Along these multiple journeys, people perceive, understand and negotiate their different encounters not only in relation to their culture of origin but also according to the experiences gained during their relocations’ (ibid., 916). Thus the copy of the arch, while travelling and being set in multiple locations, is becoming a meaningful, agentive artefact of ideological discourse, negotiated by various communities under different spatiotemporal circumstances.

Second, nomadic heritage as portable and movable is always a kind of translated heritage. It is always a result of specialist technological work. It may be fully digital or material–digital, resembling and evoking the original, the ‘Real’. The replica of the Syrian arch is an effect of the data flows; thus dynamism, flux and transformation are its core affordances. Unlike precious musealia that hardly ever leave collections and storage, hybrid heritage is predesigned to move. In the case of the replica of the Syrian arch, its most praised and discussed feature is its capability of being relocated and exhibited worldwide, mostly because it can be folded, packed and shipped, and even with a weight of 11 tonnes it needs less legal permission to travel than any other smaller artefact, sculpture or painting.

Third, nomadic heritage in the form of a digital or material object is of compensatory value. It replaces something that has been destroyed, decayed or looted. Thus its creation is always motivated by loss and absence, and as such it generates its own mourning aura by situated social practices. The example of the Syrian arch’s copy has its obvious compensatory dimension. As the creators of the replica state,

The goal was to use this installation as a means of sending a message of peace and hope, of demonstrating how new technologies can contribute to the process of restoration and reconstruction, and drawing attention to the importance of helping to protect and preserve the history and heritage of peoples under threat all over the world.Footnote 7

Nomadic heritage brings hope but does not allow one to forget about what has been lost and destroyed.

Fourth, nomadic heritage is an object of visible public interest. This stems directly from its compensatory character and delivers the answer to the questions why and what has been lost. As Kamash proved in her study, the replica did not leave her respondents without a reaction. This artefact of ideological discourse works on affects and emotions; it is not an incomprehensible ruin or a pile of stones – this is a direct political statement, a sign of contemporary conflicts and threats that are widely discussed, commonly known and at least partly understood by the general public.

Digital as ethical?

Until now I have presented several points that demonstrate the affirmative potential of the Syrian arch’s copy. Such a hybrid object allows one to negotiate traditional patterns and concepts, to actualize and appropriate forms of heritage to contemporary social circumstances and conditions. Nevertheless, the Syrian arch’s replica raises my true concerns on the ethical level. Here I refer mostly to the imperial locations where the replica was placed and exhibited. The arch’s ‘Grand Tour’ and spatio-political settings are circumstances under which the replica may be seen as a failure, given its mission to stand as ‘an important gesture of friendship and solidarity with people in the regions of conflict’.Footnote 8 Created and owned by Western agendas, it recalls the long-standing Western ambition of possessing heritage (Thompson Reference Thompson2016).

Going back to the beginnings of the controversial copy, one should note that the Syrian arch’s copy was created as a compensatory replacement, a symbol of lost heritage and of the serious implications of terrorism. However, the first question that comes to my mind is – who is actually mourning this loss? As the list of locations where the replica was set suggests, it was the West that felt the most touched by this heritage catastrophe. A Roman archaeological site was destroyed in the course of a terrorist act. So the ‘West’ reacted with powerful technologies to revive a treasure of universal heritage. Technologies were deployed to create a compensation for the ‘West’, in the ‘West’. Here there are no Syrians struggling with war, migrating, losing their families, their belongings and finally their lives. The replica of the arch is neither about Syrian war, nor about Syrian losses, and never about Syrian heritage. This copy was not created for Syrians as a replacement, as compensation, or as a sign of active disagreement. As the ‘Grand Tour’ of the fake arch proves, it was created by and for imperial powers to mourn, compensate and prove that heritage is not global. In this sense, the process of re-creation revives and recalls the original meaning of the ‘real’ arch as a sign of imperial power. By reinvigorating old oriental myths, the West is reaffirming its interest in the Middle East, and so it is creating a target for continued destruction of such sites by those wanting to act against the West. In this sense the restoration of colonial legacy and colonial appropriation of the Graeco-Roman past shall be seen as silent agreement in the neo-colonial oppression that affects further conflicts. One could say, ‘the Syrian arch is coming home!’ but the home is not Syria – it was Rome, and now it is its ancestor, the West. Heritage is ‘Western’ (it does not matter whether then or now) and civilized, to paraphrase one of the comments left on a postcard to Palmyra.

The replica is a showcase example of the development of Western technologies. Alexander I. Stingl assumes in his extensive study entitled The digital coloniality of power. Epistemic disobedience in the social sciences and the legitimacy of the digital age, ‘Digital Culture is the extension of the very bourgeois civil society that has constituted the Global North … [it] is … merely the extension of the coloniality of power and Being’ (Stingl Reference Stingl2016, xvii, original emphasis; cf. Mignolo Reference Mignolo2007). Stingl connects globalization and digitization as two parallel processes that occurred after the Second World War and strengthened the global primacy and dominance of the ‘West’. His study of biotechnologies shows that the ‘Other’ is currently being colonized by Western, imperial technologies. The West has its skills and innovations, machines and software, and thanks to them it can dominate and conquer those who have not mastered such technologies. Stingl’s way of thinking about imperial technologies resembles Coronil’s description of American imperialism – a quiet and indirect form of control based on economic dependencies that result in serious ‘imperial effects’ (Coronil Reference Coronil, Stoler, McGranahan and Perdue2007, 243). Coronil’s case study of 9/11 is crucial here – 9/11 is commonly seen as an American symbol of a tragedy, but no one knows and no one questions what happened in Chile on the same date which was a direct effect of American imperial policy (Coronil Reference Coronil, Stoler, McGranahan and Perdue2007, 245–246). Information flows and technologies, or, to put it simply, digital culture, contribute to the alienation of the ‘Other’, of the ‘Other’s’ history, culture and values. The media and messages are ‘Western’ and prioritize ‘Western’ interests.

Here, it is also worth recalling Stiegler’s notion of a pharmacon – technology can be a cure and a poison at the very same time. The West can manifest its tragedy of losing the Syrian arch by funding a replica and its world tour, one that does not even include Syria. The replica is once again not about people’s tragedy and war, but about technological fetishism. Similarly, it recalls the technocratic policy of UNESCO recently discussed by Meskell (Reference Meskell2018). Technical skills serve here as efficient tools of ‘cultural imperialism’ (ibid., 57). This is especially visible while reading press releases entitled ‘How 3D printers can help undo the destruction of ISIS’ (Basulto Reference Basulto2016), ‘3D printing to preserve heritage. Replica of Palmyra arch draws millions of visitors at fourth installation stop in Arona, Italy’ (Saunders Reference Saunders2017), and especially ‘The new monument men outsmart ISIS’ (Karmelek Reference Karmelek2015). The first article presents technologies as a brand-new, powerful weapon: ‘ISIS may keep blowing up historical landmarks in the Middle East, but now technology is fighting back’ (Basulto Reference Basulto2016). Military nomenclature is even more remarkable at the end of this press notice: ‘In short, the terrorists can’t win. The architects of the world, armed with only 3D cameras and 3D printers, won’t let them’ (ibid.). Here one can clearly see how the ‘civilized’ West is striking back with technologies. After Meskell, it is worth repeating the question: ‘exactly who are the “barbarians” in the conflict?’ (Meskell Reference Meskell2018, 182).

Lorna-Jane Richardson and Simon Lindgren, while reflecting on the possibility of applying social theory to digital archaeology, point out that a deep social introspection and a critical, reflexive approach in digital archaeology can bring to the discipline an understanding of relationships of power, dominance and inequality (Richardson and Lindgren Reference Richardson and Lindgren2017, 144). This kind of holistic approach to the digital archaeological object was missing when the replica of the Syrian arch was introduced to the different Western locations. Wherever it went, the copy was an artefact of ideological discourse that conveyed direct political statements. In London it was said to be ‘a symbol of solidarity with the people of Syria and a symbol of defiance of the barbarians who destroyed the original’,Footnote 9 serving as a ‘schizophrenic’ artefact at ‘schizophrenic’ Trafalgar Square (Kamash Reference Kamash2017). In New York it became ‘a powerful act of solidarity with all those hurt and lost in the war in Syria’ and ‘a historic work of art’ exhibited to be admired by New Yorkers.Footnote 10 In Dubai it was said to be ‘an embodiment of tradition and high technology’.Footnote 11 In Florence it was placed next to Michelangelo’s masterpieces David and Neptune.Footnote 12 In Arona it stood as ‘a symbol of unity, optimism, and peace’.Footnote 13 In Washington, DC it was meant to be ‘a critical way to celebrate iconic pieces and keep them very much alive and present in our collective consciousness’; it also symbolized ‘solidarity with the people of Syria, who have been subjected to such unimaginable horror by ISIS and the Assad Regime’.Footnote 14 Indeed, solidarity is always clearly visible during official political events driven by certain agendas. The last few European stops show even more clearly the hypocrisy, in this case safely hidden under the aegis of UNESCO: in Bern the arch stood as a sign ‘for human dignity, against ignorance’, to celebrate Switzerland’s 70th anniversary of commitment to UNESCO.Footnote 15

The Syrian arch was hijacked by the imperial countries, ‘civilized’ and possessed thanks to their powerful technological tools, to finally become an artefact of ideological discourse. Of course, one can discuss the role of the ‘West’ as the protector of world heritage (Meskell Reference Meskell2018), but the question that should be posed touches upon an ethical issue – is it really necessary to say the arch replica serves as a sign of solidarity with Syrians? Taking into consideration the possible costs of production (marble, software, machinery, human labour) and transport (oversea travel from Europe to the United States, the United Arab Emirates, and back and forth), it is really crucial to ask how this artificial substitute of lost heritage could contribute to unity and solidarity with Syrians. What did it change? Did it push and encourage people to react? Or was it only a Disney toy (Kamash Reference Kamash2017, 612, 614; Munawar Reference Munawar2017; Khunti Reference Khunti2018) that helped the ‘West’ to cover its hypocrisy and boast about new technologies that can fix those acts of ‘barbarism’? It seems that the replica did not escape the danger described by Meskell while discussing heritage protection in Syria:

the danger here is intervening in the rescue of purely material heritage, often a Classical antiquity for which Western nations consider themselves to be the legitimate inheritors, while not fully addressing those living and dying through the ongoing conflict or the resultant refugee crisis (Meskell Reference Meskell2018, 183).

Given the discussion by Khunti (Reference Khunti2018), who emphasized that countries which welcomed the arch were also those that accepted a minimal number of refugees (the US, the UK and the UAE in 2018), the arch stands as a technological curtain that covers the passiveness of Western countries to actively help the victims of the Syrian conflict.

Thus, from the above-quoted descriptions of symbols inscribed on the replica of the Syrian arch, only one seems legitimate to me – this copy, as a matter of fact, is nothing more than ‘an embodiment of tradition and high technology’, whereas tradition sends us back to the ownership of monuments and heritage (Thompson Reference Thompson2016), and high technology means new ways of translating heritage objects into digital or material–digital compensations.

As a citizen of a Second World country, a Pole born and living in Warsaw, a city that was smashed to rubble during the Second World War, I reconsidered Warsaw’s Old Town after learning about the Syrian arch copy. Here, an artificial substitute of historic architecture was rebuilt and stands where it should be standing: in Warsaw. Meskell (Reference Meskell2018, 150) fairly argues that this symbolic site demonstrates ‘human resilience to overcome the brutality of war’. By emphasizing my own standpoint and cultural background, I wish to ask for appropriate and ethical digital archaeology that is an effect of meaningful, critical, reflexive studies and works; that is addressed to local communities and their needs to identify with heritage; that produces heritage understood as ‘the interaction between people and the world, and between people themselves’ (Colomer Reference Colomer2017, 914; after Holtorf and Fairclough Reference Holtorf, Fairclough and González-Ruibal2013). The witness of Syria’s tragedies Nour A. Munawar writes, while discussing whether Palmyra should be rebuilt, ‘The post-conflict reconstruction of Palmyra should be incorporated into the reconciliation of Syrian society with all its divisions, ethnicities, sectors and religions’ (Munawar Reference Munawar2017, 43). There is no need for showcase ideological artefacts that serve to justify the ‘Western’ elite being indifferent and passive about the war in Syria. Digital technologies and their implementation for the sake of heritage at risk should not be covered with flat symbols of ideology that send us directly back to imperialism and colonial narratives (Rico 2008; 2014a; Reference Rico2014b; Excell and Rico Reference Exell and Rico2013; Reference Exell, Rico, Exell and Rico2014; Meskell Reference Meskell2018). There is no need for more imperial and exclusive fetishes of Western self-explanation when Palmyra and Syrian heritage have already become the political battlefield, now between the West and Russia. In December 2019 Russia officially confirmed the will to reconstruct the ancient site (Stone Reference Stone2019; Bishara Reference Bishara2019; Kishkovsky Reference Kishkovsky2019). The agreement was signed after the opening of the Two Palmyras exhibition, which in this political setting drew ‘parallels between Palmyra and St. Petersburg’ (Bishara Reference Bishara2019).

Conclusions: between neo-colonial digital iconoclash and the need for planetary heritage

The controversies and unanswered questions related to this study are multiple. Complex problems concerning the ontological, epistemological and, foremost, ethical dimensions of the replica could not be exhaustively addressed here. As I was trying to prove, heritage that is a product of digital workflows has a very ambiguous status. On the ontological level, it may be praised as a new, alternative form that is based on the idea of hybridity, constant negotiation between two apparently antagonistic ontologies – the ‘Real’ and the (digital) ‘Other’. When it comes to onto-epistemological potential, those artificial compensatory forms may be grasped as an embodiment of cultural nomadism: nomadic heritage, constantly in progress, keeping pace with social change and technological development. Seen as nomadic heritage that is in motion and crosses cultural borders, this kind of heritage can be grasped not even as global, but as planetary – beyond the imprisoning categories of current discourse (Gilroy Reference Gilroy2001). In introducing the concept of planetary heritage I follow wishes vocalized by Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak. By ‘planetary’ she understands a particular mindset, where ‘there is no choosing between cultures’ (Spivak Reference Spivak2013, 451). In this sense, we do not talk about ‘their heritage’, or ‘our heritage’, but about shared planetary heritage. As Paul Gilroy (Reference Gilroy2004, xii) explains, planetary is more intimate, inclined to movement and fluctuation, it opposes a bigger global scale, ‘which transmits all the triumphalism and complacency of ever-expanding imperial universals’.

Those affirmative features of planetary heritage may be revealed only if an object, a product of technological flow, is a result of a profoundly reflexive practice, sensibility, engagement with local knowledge, subaltern agency and cultural protocols. Otherwise, it may be yet another tool of technological oppression, exclusion or imperialism, especially bearing in mind that most of the world has still no funds to master technologies or to launch specialized digital labs and institutions. The meanings inscribed onto a hybrid, compensatory heritage are of crucial importance for considering it as a thoughtful and needful object of social identification. In the case discussed, heritage could indeed have the power to unite on a more human, emphatic level, not to divide in an imperial way, as it did, in the end.

Bruno Latour (Reference Latour, Latour and Weibel2002, 16) describes iconoclash as a moment ‘when one does not know, one hesitates, one is troubled by an action for which there is no way to know, without further inquiry, whether it is destructive or constructive’. Indeed, I hesitate to value the Syrian arch copy – on the one hand, it has a creative potential, mirrors hybrid translation, reflects contemporary nomad culture, gives us hope for a more sensitizing and planetary form of heritage; on the other, it comes with obvious post- and neo-colonial implications that raise even more equivocation. The replica is born from destruction; however, is it truly constructive (cf. Rico Reference Rico2016)? Can we detach different interpretive layers to focus on its affirmative potential? Can we learn our lesson from this obscure tool of political identification?

Latour states (Reference Latour, Latour and Weibel2002, 38) that

we had never been modern, but now we are even less so: fragile, frail, threatened; that is, back to normal, back to the anxious and careful stage in which the ‘others’ used to live before being ‘liberated’ from their ‘absurd beliefs’ by our courageous and ambitious modernisation. Suddenly, we seem to cling with a new intensity to our idols, to our fetishes, to our ‘factishes’, to the extraordinarily fragile ways in which our hand can produce objects over which we have no command.

According to this, where traditional beliefs and patterns are driven by technological improvements and progress to the creation of the meaning(ful/less), we are sentenced to deal with hybrid fetishes that are out of our control, that can be everything and nothing. Instead of using the opportunity to create new forms of heritage on the fertile and active ground of post-destruction landscapes (Rico Reference Rico2016, 19), the replica as a form of new heritage is just a wasted chance to truly engage in people’s tragedy.

The reason why we challenge destruction is our disagreement over revision and re-evaluation. Many researchers in the field of heritage studies are calling for reconciliation, for an acceptance of destruction and loss (DeSilvey Reference DeSilvey2017; Holtorf Reference Holtorf2018; DeSilvey and Harrison Reference DeSilvey and Harrison2020; Rico Reference Rico2020,). Cornelius Holtorf (Reference Holtorf2006, 101) writes that

destruction and loss are not the opposite of heritage but part of its very substance. It is not the acts of vandals and iconoclasts that are challenging sustainable notions of heritage, but the inability of both academic and political observers to understand and theorise what heritage does, and what is done to it, within the different realities that together make up our one world.

A constant struggle that is inscribed onto the questions of what heritage is, what it does and – finally – who owns it, overwhelms minds and prevents breaking with traditions and long-standing conventions. Who owns the rubble of the Syrian arch? Who owns the copy of the Syrian arch?

In a powerful photographic series entitled Imperium Romanum, Austrian photographer Alfred Seiland shows different archaeological sites around the world. Many of them are abandoned, empty, decayed, unfamiliar and uncanny. Seiland’s photographs show us a heritage that belongs to nobody, regardless of World Heritage Site status and emblematic appearance (cf. Meskell Reference Meskell2018). In the age of the ‘crisis of accumulation’ and ‘heritagization’ (Harrison Reference Harrison2015; Rico Reference Rico2016; DeSilvey Reference DeSilvey2017; Meskell Reference Meskell2018; Holtorf Reference Holtorf2018; González-Ruibal Reference González-Ruibal2019), everything is protected superficially, with a legal framework and a set of documents (Meskell Reference Meskell2018). Specialists do not warmly welcome the wider public to negotiate the meaning of contemporary heritage. It stays in the exclusive zone set by archaeologists, art historians, conservators and, mostly, politicians (Meskell Reference Meskell2018). Heritage is owned when someone makes the decision to own it. In the case of the Syrian arch, the idea of the arch was hijacked by a certain group of interests, copyrighted and praised as the new form of compensatory imperial heritage. The newly announced reconstruction of Palmyra by the Russians is yet another political declaration (Munawar Reference Munawar2017).

The other question that remained unsolved is the following – what else can heritage scholars do than create artificial substitutes that are sufficiently capacious for holding different, often contradictory, meanings? If they are not used to theorize new objects and artefacts of digital provenance, and still want to protect memory and heritage under threat, to engage politically and truly help people who suffer because of war and conflict, then they should probably follow initiatives like the one introduced in Berlin the same year as the replica. In 2016 Germany’s Culture Ministry launched the Multaqa (‘meeting point’) project. The main idea was to recruit and train refugees coming from Syria and Iraq as museum guides to provide native-language tours for fellow refugees, with ‘the aim of helping newly arrived people foster connections between Germany’s cultural heritage and their own’ (Olterman Reference Olterman2016). Keeping in mind that Germany welcomed a great number of refugees, this project not only had profound cultural meaning and social significance, but also was inaugurated to actively engage and help people after the traumatic events that they went through in the conflict zones. There were no blunt slogans, but a straight and explicit message conveyed by this action: ‘solidarity with the people of Syria’, quoted in this paper for the second time, but here in a more accurate context. If heritage is the interaction between people and the world, and between people themselves, then it is better to resign from the digital armoury and focus on meaning-making through socially situated practices (cf. Jones Reference Jones2017) heading towards planetary heritage.

Acknowledgements

Here I would like to thank Michael Carter, Ewa Domańska, Ian Hodder and Brendan Weaver for their comments on this paper. This research was conducted during my research stay at the Stanford Archaeology Center, where I studied under the supervision of Ian Hodder and participated in Brendan Weaver’s and Barb Voss’s course on Archaeology of Colonialism/Postcolonialsms. I would like also to thank all the participants in the course, whose feedback was very important for the final form of this paper. My research stay at the Stanford Archaeology Center wouldn’t have been possible without the generous support of the Kościuszko Foundation. The discussions on heritage that I had with Costis Dallas and Michael Shanks were also very meaningful and influenced the argument presented in this paper. I’m also very grateful to Benjamin Hanussek, who discussed migration and the refugee crisis with me, as well as the status of heritage in the Near East. The final response would not have taken its current shape without great help of Agata Kowalewska and inspiring comments delivered by the Unruly Heritage Group members: Torgeir Rinke Bangstad, Mats Burström, Denis Byrne, Tim LeCain, Ewa Domańska, Geneviève Godin, Bjørnar Olsen, Þóra Pétursdóttir and Anatolijs Venovcevs. Finally, I’m thankful to Ömür Harmanşah, the associate editor of Archaeological dialogues, the peer reviewers assigned to this manuscript and the editorial committee members, whose comments helped me in improving the general arguments of this paper.

Footnotes

1 See www.cyark.org.

3 This presentation was widely commented on on Twitter, accused of being a publicity stunt that marginalized actual work done by archaeologists, historians and heritage researchers.

6 Interestingly, one can learn about the Western universities that the staff graduated from, but it is hardly possible to find the exact specializations of people working at the Institute of Digital Archaeology.

References

Allahyari, M., 2019: Physical tactics for digital colonialism, performance–lecture at New Museum, 28 February 2019, at https://medium.com/@morehshin_87856/physical-tactics-for-digital-colonialism-45e8d3fcb2da.Google Scholar
Bailey, D., 2018: Breaking the surface. An art/archaeology of prehistoric architecture, Oxford.Google Scholar
Beale, G., and Reilly, P., 2017: Digital practice as meaning making in archaeology, Internet archaeology 44, at https://doi.org/10.11141/ia.44.13.Google Scholar
Bell, G., 2015: A woman in Arabia. The writings of the queen of the desert, London.Google Scholar
Berggren, A., Dell’Unto, N., Forte, M., Haddow, S., Hodder, I., Issavi, J., Lercari, N., Mazzucato, C., Mickel, A. and Taylor, J.S., 2015: Revisiting reflexive archaeology at Çatalhöyük. Integrating digital and 3D technologies at the trowel’s edge, Antiquity 89(344), 433448.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bhabha, H.K., 1994: The location of culture, London. Google Scholar
Bishara, H., 2019: New Palmyra agreement demonstrates Russia’s continuing soft power influence on Syria, Hyperallergic, at https://hyperallergic.com/530727/new-palmyra-agreement-demonstrates-russias-continuing-soft-power-influence-on-syria.Google Scholar
Brahm, G., 1995: Introduction, in Brahm, G. , Jr and Driscoll, M. (eds), Prosthetic territories. Politics and hypertechnologies, San Francisco and Oxford, 12.Google Scholar
Braidotti, R., 1994: Nomadic subjects. Embodiment and sexual difference in contemporary feminist theory, Cambridge. Google Scholar
Braidotti, R., 2006: Transpositions. On nomadic ethics, Cambridge. Google Scholar
Braidotti, R., 2013: The posthuman, Cambridge. Google Scholar
Brown, D., 2007: Te Ahu Hiko. Digital cultural heritage and indigenous objects, people, and environments, in Cameron, F. and Kenderdine, S. (eds), Theorizing digital cultural heritage. A critical discourse, Cambridge, 77–92.Google Scholar
Brown, M., 2016: Palmyra’s Arch of Triumph recreated in Trafalgar Square, The Guardian, at www.theguardian.com/culture/2016/apr/19/palmyras-triumphal-arch-recreated-in-trafalgar-square.Google Scholar
Buchli, V., 2016: An archaeology of the immaterial, London and New York. Google Scholar
Burch, S., 2017: A virtual oasis. Trafalgar Square’s Arch of Palmyra, Archnet-IJAR 11 (3), 5877.Google Scholar
Cabot, H., 2019: The business of anthropology and the European refugee regime, American ethnologist 46 (3), 261275.Google Scholar
Cameron, F., 2007: Beyond the cult of the replicant. Museums and historical digital objects. Traditional concerns, new discourses, in Cameron, F. and Kenderdine, S. (eds), Theorizing digital cultural heritage. A critical discourse, Cambridge, 49–76.Google Scholar
Caraher, W., 2019: Slow archaeology, punk archaeology, and the ‘archaeology of care’, European journal of archaeology 22 (3), 372385.Google Scholar
Carter, M., 2019: The making of digital archaeological thought, Journal of computer applications in archaeology (in press).Google Scholar
Cassibry, K., 2018: Reception of the Roman arch monument, American journal of archaeology 122 (2), 245275.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chakrabarty, D., Wickramasinghe, N., Robbe, K., Modest, W. and Mark, E., 2016: Minor archives, meta histories. GLASS faculty roundtable, Práticas da história, journal on theory, historiography and uses of the past 3, 93124.Google Scholar
Chambers, I., and Terranova, T., 2014: Introduction. Inflections of technoculture. Biodigital media, postcolonial theory and feminism, Anglistica AION 18 (2), 118.Google Scholar
Colomer, L., 2017: Heritage on the move. Cross-cultural heritage as a response to globalisation, mobilities and multiple migrations, International journal of heritage studies 23 (10), 913927.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cooper, A., and Green, C., 2016: Embracing the complexities of ‘big data’ in archaeology. The case of the English Landscape and Identities Project, Journal of archaeological methods and theory 23, 271304.Google Scholar
Coppelstone, T., and Dunne, D., 2017: Digital media, creativity, narrative structure and heritage, Internet archaeology 44, at https://doi.org/10.11141/ia.44.2.Google Scholar
Coronil, F., 2007: After empire. Reflections on imperialism from the Américas, in Stoler, A.L., McGranahan, C. and Perdue, P.C. (eds), Imperial formations, Santa Fe, 241271.Google Scholar
Cunliffe, E., 2016: Should we 3D print a new Palmyra?, The conversation, 31 March 2016, at https://theconversation.com/should-we-3d-print-a-new-palmyra-57014.Google Scholar
Cunningham, J.J., and MacEachern, S., 2016: Ethnoarchaeology as slow science, World archaeology 48 (5), 628641.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dallas, C., 2015: Curating archaeological knowledge in the digital continuum. From practice to infrastructure, Open archaeology 1, 176207.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dawson, I., and Reilly, P., 2019: Messy assemblages, residuality and recursion within a phygital nexus, Epoiesen, at http://dx.doi.org/10.22215/epoiesen/2019.4.Google Scholar
DeSilvey, C., 2017: Curated decay. Heritage beyond saving, Minneapolis and London. Google Scholar
DeSilvey, C., and Harrison, R., 2020: Anticipating loss. Rethinking endangerment in heritage futures, International journal of heritage studies 26 (1), at https://doi.org/10.1080/13527258.2019.1644530.Google Scholar
Dietler, M., 2005: The archaeology of colonization and the colonization of archaeology. Theoretical challenges from an ancient Mediterranean colonial encounter, in Stein, G. (ed.), The archaeology of colonial encounters. Comparative perspectives, Santa Fe, 3368.Google Scholar
Future Foundation, Dubai, 2017: Dubai Future Foundation’s reconstructed Palmyra arch wins prestigious award at University of Oxford, at www.dubaifuture.gov.ae/dubai-future-foundations-reconstructed-palmyra-arch-wins-prestigious-award-at-university-of-oxford.Google Scholar
Earl, G., 2013: Modelling in archaeology. Computer graphic and other digital pasts, Perspectives on science 21 (2), 226244.Google Scholar
Edgeworth, M., 2015: From spadework to screenwork. New forms of archaeological discovery in digital space, in Carusi, A., Hoel, A.S., Webmoor, T. and Woolgar, S. (eds), Visualization in the age of computerization, London and New York, 40–58.Google Scholar
Elcheikh, Z., 2019: Palmyra. A story of ruins, struggle(s) and beyond, Chronos. Revue d’histoire de l’universite de Balamand 39, 105125.Google Scholar
Elias, A., 2012: Camouflage and surrealism, International journal of the humanities 24, 125.Google Scholar
Elias, C., 2019: Whose digital heritage?, Third text 33 (6), 687707.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Exell, K., and Rico, T., 2013: ‘There is no heritage in Qatar’. Orientalism, colonialism and other problematic histories, World archaeology 45 (4), at https://doi.org/10.1080/00438243.2013.852069.Google Scholar
Exell, K., and Rico, T., 2014: Introduction. (De)constructing Arabian heritage debates, in Exell, K. and Rico, T. (ed.), Cultural heritage in the Arabian peninsula. Debates, discourses and practices, Farnham and Burlington, 118.Google Scholar
Favro, D., 2013: To be or not to be in past spaces. Thoughts on Roman immersive reconstructions, in Bond, S. and Houston, S. (eds), Re-presenting the past. Archaeology through image and text, Providence, 151168.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Forte, M., 2007: Ecological cybernetics, virtual reality, and virtual heritage, in Cameron, F. and Kenderdine, S. (eds), Theorizing digital cultural heritage. A critical discourse, Cambridge, 389–408.Google Scholar
Forte, M., 2010: Introduction to cyber-archaeology, in Forte, M. (ed.), Cyber-archaeology, Oxford, 914.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Forte, M., 2014: Virtual reality, cyberarchaeology, teleimmersive archaeology, in Remondino, F. and Campana, S. (eds), 3D recording and modelling in archaeology and cultural heritage. Theory and best practices, Oxford, 113127.Google Scholar
Gilroy, P., 2001: Against race. Imagining political culture beyond the color line, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Gilroy, P., 2004: After empire. Melancholia or convivial culture?, Abingdon.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
González-Ruibal, A., 2019: An archaeology of the contemporary era, Abingdon and New York.Google Scholar
Gunkel, D., 2006: We are Borg. Cyborgs and the subject of communication, Communication theory 10 (3), 332357.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haraway, D., 1988. Situated knowledges. The science question in feminism and the privilege of partial perspective, Feminist studies 14 (3), 575599.Google Scholar
Haraway, D., 1991: A cyborg manifesto. Science, technology, and socialist-feminism in the late twentieth century, in D. Haraway, Simians, cyborgs and women. The reinvention of nature, New York, 149–181.Google Scholar
Harmanşah, Ö., 2015: Isis, heritage, and the spectacle of destruction in the global media, Near Eastern archaeology 78 (3), 170179.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harrison, R., 2015: Beyond ‘natural’ and ‘cultural’ heritage. Toward an ontological politics of heritage in the age of Anthropocene, Heritage & society 8 (1), 2442.Google Scholar
Harrison, R., Appelgren, S. and Bohlin, A., 2018: Belonging and belongings. On migrant and nomadic heritages in and for the Anthropocene, in Hamilakis, Y. (ed.), The new nomadic age. Archaeologies of forced and undocumented migration, Sheffield, 209220.Google Scholar
Holtorf, C., 2006: Can less be more? Heritage in the age of terrorism, Public archaeology 5 (2), 101109.Google Scholar
Holtorf, C., 2010: From Stonehenge to Las Vegas. Archaeology as popular culture. Walnut Creek, CA.Google Scholar
Holtorf, C., 2013: On pastness. A reconsideration of materiality in archaeological object authenticity, Anthropological quarterly 86 (2), 427443.Google Scholar
Holtorf, C., 2018: Embracing change. How cultural resilience is increased through cultural heritage, World archaeology, at https://doi.org/10.1080/00438243.2018.1510340.Google Scholar
Holtorf, C., and Fairclough, G., 2013: ‘The New Heritage and re-shapings of the past’, in González-Ruibal, A., ed., Reclaiming archaeology beyond the tropes of modernity, London, 197210.Google Scholar
Huggett, J., 2015: A manifesto for an introspective digital archaeology, Open archaeology 1, 8695.Google Scholar
Huggett, J., 2017: The apparatus of digital archaeology, Internet archaeology 44, at https://doi.org/10.11141/ia.44.7.Google Scholar
Huvila, I., and Huggett, J., 2018: Archaeological practices, knowledge work and digitalisation, Journal of computer applications in archaeology 1 (1), 88100.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Isakhan, B., and Meskell, L., 2019: UNESCO’s project to ‘Revive the Spirit of Mosul’. Iraqi and Syrian opinion on heritage reconstruction after the Islamic State, International journal of heritage studies 25 (11), 11891204.Google Scholar
Jalabi, R., 2016: Replica of Syrian arch destroyed by Isis unveiled in New York City, The Guardian, at www.theguardian.com/us-news/2016/sep/20/palmyra-arch-syria-new-york.Google Scholar
Jamieson, R.W., 2014: Hacienda ruins as sites of difficult memory in Chimborazo, Ecuador, Journal of social archaeology 14 (2), 224243.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jeffrey, S., 2015: Challenging heritage visualisation. Beauty, aura and democratisation, Open archaeology 1, 144152.Google Scholar
Jones, I.W.N., and Levy, T.E., 2018: Cyber-archaeology and grand narratives. Where do we currently stand?, in Levy, T.E. and Jones, I.W.N. (eds), Cyber-archaeology and grand narratives. Digital technology and deep-time perspectives on culture change in the Middle East, at https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-65693-9.Google Scholar
Jones, S., 2017: Wrestling with the social value of heritage. Problems, dilemmas and opportunities, Journal of community archaeology & heritage 4 (1), 2137.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jones, S., Jeffrey, S., Maxwell, M., Hale, A. and Jones, C., 2017: 3D heritage visualisation and the negotiation of authenticity. The ACCORD project, International journal of heritage studies 24 (4), 333353.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Joyce, R.A., and Gillespie, S.D., 2015: Making things out of objects that move, in Joyce, R.A. and Gillespie, S.D. (eds), Things in motion. Object itineraries in anthropological practice, Santa Fe, 320.Google Scholar
Kamash, Z., 2017: ‘Postcard to Palmyra’. Bringing the public into debates over post-conflict reconstruction in the Middle East, World archaeology 49 (5), 608622.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Khunti, R., 2018: The problem with printing Palmyra. Exploring the ethics of using 3D printing technology to reconstruct heritage, Studies in digital heritage 2 (1), 112.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Latour, B., 2002: What is iconoclash? Or is there a world beyond the image wars?, in Latour, B. and Weibel, P. (eds), Iconoclash. Image wars in science, religion and art, Cambridge, 14–37.Google Scholar
Lercari, N., Shulze, J., Wendrich, W., Porter, B., Burton, M. and Levy, T.E., 2016: 3-D digital preservation of at-risk global cultural heritage, in Catalano, C.E. and De Luca, L. (eds), EUROGRAPHICS workshop on graphics and cultural heritage, at https://doi.org/10.2312/gch.20161395.Google Scholar
Leszczyński, A., 2015: Poles don’t want immigrants. They don’t understand them, don’t like them, The Guardian, 2 July 2015, at www.theguardian.com/world/2015/jul/02/poles-dont-want-immigrants-they-dont-understand-them-dont-like-them.Google Scholar
Levy, T.E., Smith, N.G., Najjar, M., DeFanti, T.A., Yu-Min Lin, A. and Kuester, F., 2012: Cyber-archaeology in the Holy Land. The future of the past, San Diego. Google Scholar
Liebmann, M., 2013: Parsing hybridity. Archaeologies of amalgamation in seventeenth-century New Mexico, in Card, J.J. (ed.), The archaeology of hybrid material culture, Carbondale, 2549.Google Scholar
Ma, G., Li, W. and Yang, J., 2018: State-of-the-art of 3D printing technology of cementitious material. An emerging technique for construction, Science China 61 (4), 475495.Google Scholar
Meskell, L.M., 2018: A future in ruins. UNESCO, world heritage, and the dream of peace, New York.Google Scholar
Meskell, L.M., 2020: Imperialism, internationalism, and archaeology in the un/making of the Middle East, American anthropologist 122 (3), 554567.Google Scholar
Mignolo, W., 2007: Coloniality of power and de-colonial thinking, Cultural studies 21 (2–3), 155167.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moraru, C., 2015: Reading for the planet. Toward a geomethodology, Ann Arbor.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morgan, C., and Pallascio, P.M., 2015: Digital media, participatory culture, and difficult heritage. Online remediation and the trans-Atlantic slave trade, Journal of African diaspora archaeology and heritage 4 (3), 260278.Google Scholar
Mulder, S., 2016: Evliyalarin ve sultanlarin türbeleri (Shrines for saints and sultans. On the destruction of local heritage sites by ISIS), Aktüel arkeoloji (Archaeology today), June 2016, 92–99.Google Scholar
Mulder, S., 2020 (forthcoming): War and recovery, in Insoll, T., Fenwick, C. and Walker, B. (eds), The Oxford handbook of Islamic archaeology, Oxford. Google Scholar
Munawar, N.A., 2017: Reconstructing cultural heritage in conflict zones. Should Palmyra be rebuilt?, Ex novo journal of archaeology 2, 3348.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Munawar, N.A., 2019: Cultural heritage and the Arab Spring. A review of (inter)national efforts to safeguard heritage under fire, in Çakmak, C. and Özçelik, A.O. (eds), The world community and the Arab Spring, Cham, 83115.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nader, L., 1997: The phantom factor. Impact of the Cold War on anthropology, in Chomsky, N., Barsamian, D. and Zinn, H. (eds), The Cold War and the university. Toward an intellectual history of the postwar years, New York, 107146.Google Scholar
Olterman, P., 2016: Berlin museums’ refugee guides scheme fosters meeting of minds, The Guardian, at www.theguardian.com/world/2016/feb/27/berlin-museums-refugee-guides-scheme-fosters-meeting-of-minds.Google Scholar
Oma, K.A., 2018: Making space from the position of duty of care. Early Bronze Age human–sheep entanglements in Norway, in Pilaar-Birch, S. (ed.), Multispecies archaeology, New York, 214249.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Perry, S., 2018: Why are heritage interpreters voiceless at the trowel’s edge? A plea for rewriting the archaeological workflow, Advances in archaeological practice 6 (3), 212227.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Plets, G., 2017: Violins and trowels for Palmyra. Post-conflict heritage politics, Anthropology today 33 (4), 1822.Google Scholar
Richardson, L.-J., and Lindgren, S., 2017: Online tribes and digital authority. What can social theory bring to digital archaeology?, Open archaeology 3, 139–14.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rico, T., 2008: Negative heritage. The place of conflict in world heritage, Conservation and management of archaeological sites 10 (4), 344352.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rico, T., 2014a: Islamophobia and the location of heritage debates in the Arabian peninsula, in Exell, K. and Rico, T. (eds), Cultural heritage in the Arabian peninsula. Debates, discourses and practices, Farnham and Burlington, 1932.Google Scholar
Rico, T., 2014b: The limits of a ‘heritage at risk’ framework. The construction of post-disaster cultural heritage in Banda Aceh, Indonesia, Journal of social archaeology 14 (2), 157176.Google Scholar
Rico, T., 2015: Heritage at risk. The authority and autonomy of a dominant preservation framework, in Lafrenz-Samuels, K. and Rico, T. (eds), Heritage keywords. Rhetoric and redescription in cultural heritage, Boulder, CO, 147162.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rico, T., 2016: Constructing destruction. Heritage narratives in the tsunami city, New York and London.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rico, T., 2017: Technology, technocracy, and the promise of ‘alternative’ heritage values, in Silverman, H., Waterton, E. and Watson, S. (eds), Heritage in action, New York, 217–230.Google Scholar
Rico, T., 2020: Reclaiming post-disaster narratives of loss in Indonesia, International journal of heritage studies 26 (1), 818.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Roosevelt, C.R., Cobb, P., Moss, E., Olson, B.R. and Ünlüsoy, S., 2015: Excavation is destruction digitization. Advances in archaeological practice, Journal of field archaeology 40 (3), 325346.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Saunders, S., 2017: 3D printing to preserve heritage. Replica of Palmyra arch draws millions of visitors at fourth installation stop in Arona, Italy, at https://3dprint.com/179081/palmyra-arch-in-italy.Google Scholar
Schnapp, A., 1996: The discovery of the past. The origins of archaeology, London. Google Scholar
Shanks, M., 1998: The life of an artifact in an interpretive archaeology, Fennoscandia archaeologica 15, 1531.Google Scholar
Shanks, M., 2012: The archaeological imagination, Walnut Creek, CA. Google Scholar
Shome, R., 1996: Postcolonial interventions in the rhetorical canon. An ‘other’ view, Communication theory 6 (1), 4059.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Simanowski, R., 2016: Data love. The seduction and betrayal of digital technologies, New York.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Solli, B., Burström, M., Domanska, E., Edgeworth, M., González-Ruibal, A., Holtorf, C., Lucas, G., Oestigaard, T., Smith, L. and Witmore, C., 2011: Some reflections on heritage and archaeology in the Anthropocene, Norwegian archaeological review 44 (1), 4088.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Spivak, G.C., 2013: An aesthetic education in the era of globalization, Cambridge and London. Google Scholar
Stiegler, B., 2016: Automatic society. The future of work, Vol. 1, trans. D. Ross, Malden and Cambridge.Google Scholar
Stingl, A.I., 2016: The digital coloniality of power. Epistemic disobedience in the social sciences and the legitimacy of the digital age, Lanham, Boulder, CO, New York and London. Google Scholar
Stobiecka, M., forthcoming: Towards a critical archeological museum, in Westmont, V.C. (ed.), Critical public archaeology.Google Scholar
Stone, L., 2019: Russia and Syria announce joint project to restore ancient city of Palmyra, Architect’s newspaper, at https://archpaper.com/2019/12/russia-syria-restore-palmyra.Google Scholar
Supernant, K., Baxter, E., Lyons, N. and Atalay, S., 2020: Archaeologies of the heart, Cham.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Taussig, M., 2007: Zoology, magic, and surrealism in the War on Terror, Critical inquiry 34, 99116.Google Scholar
Thompson, E., 2016: Possession. The curious history of private collectors from antiquity to the present, New Haven, CT and London.Google Scholar
Thompson, E.L., 2018: Recreating the past in our own image. Contemporary artists’ reactions to the digitization of threatened cultural heritage sites in the Middle East, Future anterior. Journal of historic preservation, history, theory, and criticism 15 (1), 4556.Google Scholar
Thompson, E.L., 2017: Legal and ethical considerations for digital recreations of cultural heritage, Chapman law review 20 (1), 153176.Google Scholar
Ward-Perkins, J.B., 1992: Roman imperial architecture, New Haven, CT and London.Google Scholar
Wilson, E., and Michalak, K. (eds), 2015: Open source archaeology. Ethics and practice, Warsaw and Boston. CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Young, R.J.C., 1995: Colonial desire. Hybridity in theory, culture, and race, London. Google Scholar