A topic that we've been grappling with in class has been the ethics of displaying and uncovering human remains. Ethically, it is ok? What are our moral obligations? If we choose to display, how do we? I've found all of these questions very compelling, and somewhat unanswerable.
In class our professor drew us to this following quote:
In class our professor drew us to this following quote:
"We do no harm to those poor chaps. When I am dead you can dig me up ten times for all I care"
-Sir Mortimer Wheeler
From my understanding, these sentiments used to be fairly common place in archeology. Today, however, discourse on topics of digging human remains, studying human remains and displaying human remains has become incredibly more complex and intricate. So many voices are involved today: the people claiming ownership to the remains, the research team that wants to study the remains, the public that has varying opinions on the remains, and the museum that wants to display the remains. Everyone seems to have a vested interest in how the remains are treated, and coming to a solution which takes an understanding of all interests seems impossible. I find this issue especially interesting in the context of Native American remains. The Native American people believe that a dead person should not be disturbed - that is, they should not be dug up, and they should certainly not be studied upon. And if a person is unburied, then they should be reburied expediently. This belief is meaningful in a greater context of their world belief systems, and their ideology. Scientific inquiry directly challenges these beliefs, unfortunately. But, on the researchers' side, not studying or digging up the remains would represent a huge loss to the body of scientific knowledge that they are building. Studying these remains would tell scientists about the environment, culture, and diet of ancient North American civilizations. This all becomes more muddeled up when you look at the legal context of which you are operating in. In Canada, matters of reburial and study are dealt with on a case-by-case basis. In America, there is NAGPRA, the Native American Grave Protection and Repatriation Act, that legally states that remains are to be given to the North American populations, and scientific inquiry is only to be employed upon permission by that particular Native group.
I can't decide how I feel about this - it's something that I have been struggling with the past week. I don't want some groups to see archeology as destructive to belief systems, or disrespectful to ideologies. But I also don't think it's right to forgo scientific inquiry. There is so much more left to know!
Last semester, I took a really great course about the peoples of the Amazon. In one class, we were discussing the contradictory origin beliefs between the peoples of the Amazon and of the archeologists studying in the Amazon. My professor noted that as an archeologist, you need to remember that there are multiple ways of knowing something. You don't need to employ binary definitions of right and wrong on difficult topics like origins. There can be a spiritual way of knowing something, and a scientific way of knowing something. And they don't need to be ranked - one way of knowing something is not better than another. Although this concept is somewhat abstract, and difficult to employ, I think it's meaningful to think about when considering the problems of remains human repatriation that are currently occurring in North America.
I can't decide how I feel about this - it's something that I have been struggling with the past week. I don't want some groups to see archeology as destructive to belief systems, or disrespectful to ideologies. But I also don't think it's right to forgo scientific inquiry. There is so much more left to know!
Last semester, I took a really great course about the peoples of the Amazon. In one class, we were discussing the contradictory origin beliefs between the peoples of the Amazon and of the archeologists studying in the Amazon. My professor noted that as an archeologist, you need to remember that there are multiple ways of knowing something. You don't need to employ binary definitions of right and wrong on difficult topics like origins. There can be a spiritual way of knowing something, and a scientific way of knowing something. And they don't need to be ranked - one way of knowing something is not better than another. Although this concept is somewhat abstract, and difficult to employ, I think it's meaningful to think about when considering the problems of remains human repatriation that are currently occurring in North America.



.jpeg)







