Dr. Nassaney delivering his lecture at the MHAC. Photo by Stacey Camp. |
Amelia Harp’s
presentation, “Cross-Cultural Concerns in Collaborative Contexts,” was based on
her M.A. practicum completed at Georgia State University earlier this year. She
discussed how collaboration occurs at Fort St. Joseph and the ways in which
involvement in the archaeology at the Fort differs between interest groups. She
suggested that academics should examine the factors that limit stakeholder
involvement, if they aim to be as inclusive as they claim.
I also provided some reflections on collaboration in my
presentation “Public Archaeology: A Two-Edged Sword?” While archaeology has
benefited from increasing public interest and involvement, public participation
in and opinions about archaeology can heighten the likelihood of divergent
interpretations of the past and lead to contestation. I briefly discussed two
case studies in which local constituents rejected my archaeological efforts and
their results. I concluded that it is difficult for archaeologists to be
accountable to all the publics they potentially serve when various groups hold
different and competing values.
After our presentations on Saturday morning, we spent the
afternoon touring contested sites in Chicago. Jackson Park was home to the 1893
Columbian Exposition and has been chosen as the site of the new Obama
Presidential Center. Those is favor of the Center at this location appear to be
less concerned with the nineteenth-century heritage that will be destroyed by
construction. The Pullman National Monument is another place where divergent
histories can be constructed due to the diversity of people who occupied this
industrial town and the interests of a wide range of preservationists. Work at
this site will soon commemorate Pullman and his workers of all nationalities
and racialized groups.
The Pullman Clock Tower (1880) at the Pullman National Monument. Photo by Rebecca Graff. |
Those of us on the tour braved stiff winds, rain, and even
a little snow to see these sites and discuss the contested histories they
endanger. The conference underscored the idea that many people are interested
in heritage, though often for different reasons. Conflicts are most likely to
be resolved when relations of trust can be built and lines of communication are
left open.
Michael S. Nassaney, Ph.D.
Principal Investigator
Fort St. Joseph Archaeological Project
Western Michigan University
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