The Public Face of Archaeology in Britain
(Part 2)
Session Organiser: Jenny Moore & Jim Symonds
(Sheffield University)
Judith Winters, Graham McElearney, Kathryn Denning
(Archaeology and Archaeological Science
Research School, University of Sheffield, West Court, 2 Mappin St., Sheffield
S2 4DT)
Meeting in the Middle of Nowhere: Sharing Archaeology
with an Audience in Cyberspace
The WWW is a powerfully versatile
medium for communicating archaeological information. Importantly, we need
not consider the Web as a vehicle for either public outreach or formal
academic publication; a single presentation can be meaningful to a diverse
audience, from professional archaeologists to curious schoolchildren. The
flexibility inherent in hypertext means that websites can be layered in
complexity, allowing the reader to customise their viewing experience.
Basic websites are very simple to design
- for newcomers, we will demonstrate the creation of a basic hypertext
document. Drawing from the experience of founding Assemblage, we
will describe how a team of Sheffield graduate students launched a much
visited electronic journal, showing that a site need not be complicated
or exclusively dedicated to 'the public' to find a wide readership.
For the more technically inclined,
there is enormous potential for more elaborate sites which integrate complex
visual materials (e.g. from GIS and QTVR) as both presentational and analytical
tools, as examples based on current landscape archaeology projects in the
Peak District will show.
Martin Evison
(Department. of Forensic Pathology,
University of Sheffield, Medico-Legal Centre, Watery St., Sheffield S3
7ES)
Public Faces
Archaeological facial reconstruction
exhibits feature in a number of British museums and have proved popular
with the public. Portrayal of forensic facial reconstruction on television
and in film, in relation to crime also captured the public imagination.
Whilst this presentation will clarify the limited scientific basis of facial
reconstructions, a basis which is all too often overstated, it will also
emphasise the positive aspects of the technique. A carefully produced facial
reconstruction can create empathy with individuals whose lives we hope
to portray. Its popularity may also be cautiously used to encourage the
development of a broader interest in archaeology. Facial reconstruction,
and advanced 3D graphical simulation methods which lie behind computerised
reconstructions, are archaeological techniques which have valuable applications
inside and outside the discipline.
Rachel Clough
(Kilmartin House Trust, Kilmartin,
Argyll, Scotland PA31 8RQ)
'We're Quite Interested'. An Enquiry into what
the people who live in one of the richest archaeological landscapes in
Britain feel.
Kilmartin House is a new archaeological
museum in one of the richest archaeological landscapes in Britain. It was
built up over a four year period in a community which was uncertain about
the value and meaning of archaeology and doubtful about what interpretation
of landscapes could contribute to local communities.
Now open, Kilmartin House is a focus
for debate on matters of central importance in archaeology: the balance
of the cultural and economic in the landscape, the destiny of artefacts,
the care of monuments and the pitch of interpretation. The results of a
survey on how people react to the presentation of archaeology, both at
Kilmartin House and elsewhere, will be given.
Ian W.F. Baxter
(Sidney Sussex College, University
of Cambridge, Cambridge, CB2 3HU)
From Concept to Country House
In characterising heritage management
as a 'product' within a suite of wider environmental initiatives, analysis
of its various components and model-building using a strategic management
perspective gives some clarity to an already complicated and important
subject area. It may also allow re-integration with the academic discipline
of archaeology, and as a product able to be ever more accountable when
drawing on government or public support.
Tim Schadla- Hall
(The Firs, Main St., Houghton-on-the-Hill,
Leicester LE7 9GD)
No Longer Can Objects Speak For Themselves
Despite the enormous success of museums
in the UK in attracting rising numbers of visitors in recent years, it
is clear that at least some of the public remain resistant to entering
museums. This is despite museums being recognised as publicly accessible
resource centres to the past, and huge changes in display - often away
from object filled cases and into the field, in 'out of hours' activities,
or through interactive and user friendly approaches. Museums have provided
innovative approaches to excavation accessibility, to landscape studies
and to (even!) collections. The value of museums will continue, and expand
as the Treasure Act comes into force. Hopefully, this will introduce a
wider public to the importance of objects and records. Objects are increasing
in importance in the popular press as regional and national disagreements
over the final resting place of archaeological finds develops. Possibly
one route is to encourage people to identify with the material from their
past, and 'keep it local'.
Mick Aston
(Dept of Continuing Education,
University of Bristol, 8-10 Berkeley Square, Bristol BS8 1HH)
Making Time Team
Mick Aston is the Time Team 'team
leader'. It is hoped that Tony Robinson will be able to join him, and they
do a joint presentation. The key points covered will be:
1. How the Time Team series has evolved
2. The key elements in each programme
3. The philosophy guiding Time Team
4. Examples from the recent series,
plus the world's first ever 'live' dig
5. Personal appraisal
6. What next for Time Team and archaeology
generally