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Campaign Message ? - Printable Version +- BAJR Federation Archaeology (http://www.bajrfed.co.uk) +-- Forum: BAJR Federation Forums (http://www.bajrfed.co.uk/forumdisplay.php?fid=3) +--- Forum: The Site Hut (http://www.bajrfed.co.uk/forumdisplay.php?fid=7) +--- Thread: Campaign Message ? (/showthread.php?tid=3828) |
Campaign Message ? - BAJR - 29th March 2011 We could end up in a terrible muddle... inspiring the future with past understanding the present in archaeology But seriously... I think we are getting there and there is news of a competition for a short 45 sec viral ad ( and indeed even ol' BAJR will be putting money in the kitty) Here is what I wrote last night to the email discussion Quote:I tend to agree with Chris Cumberpatch, but what has come to a head in the BAJR discussions are the following: Mike Heyworth added this Quote: Will keep people informed. ps... we are doing our best to kill Mortimer! Campaign Message ? - Stephen Jack - 30th March 2011 Pay peanuts get an archaeologist Archaeology matters archaeologist don't Raise standards pay peanuts Campaign Message ? - BAJR - 30th March 2011 Most amusing... not far from the truth, but perhaps not the mesage we are trying to pread. However, there is some truth in what we must try and achieve... make archaeology be the thing that matters most. (and thus help archaeologists be default) :face-kiss: Campaign Message ? - P Prentice - 30th March 2011 sorry bajr but 'archaeology - discover yourself' has an obvious connotation that should perhaps be avoided Campaign Message ? - overseas - 30th March 2011 I dont believe the clich?s will change most peoples minds. Its too easy easy to say "history matters", it is much harder to explain why .For that, I think we should start digging deep, where it matters. Here are some emotive, but some also quite long-thought-out beginnings of answers, and to to the politics of what is currently happening. They are offered as food for thought, they are not the snappy by-lines that were proposed. The way history shapes our dreams: dreams are what we build with I believe there was once a land - that maybe almost existed when I when young - I could believe in, I could love, I could work for, fight for and if I truly had to do it, die for to defend it, for love is nothing if not that for which we will give our lives - when it truly must be so. Perhaps, somewhere under the ground, it is that I still seek, as I seek it everywhere in everything that I do. I cannot bring it back by unearthing the ruins of the past, but maybe, as we continue to contribute to the greater good, collectively we do prevent the memory dying, the dream despairing, the vision folding its wings, as politicians sell our land, its past and its future, to the highest bidder for the lowest goals: for power and for wealth, and for the few. Do not dream or imagine, that they are in the business of doing anything else. Shame Someone once said to me: I do not live in a third world country. I live in one of the wealthiest countries in the midst of one of the wealthiest civilizations that has ever existed. Until we are declared bankrupt, or starving, or so inept that we can no longer govern ourselves, we can afford archaeology. Dispossession and manipulation And without our past, something that the simplest civilizations on earth ensure through oral history traditions, we can be dispossessed of everything we have ever had: freedom, dignity, self determination, understanding, politics, tradition and identity. Without all this, well, we are little better than slaves. Politics Archaeology does not cost jobs - it creates them: it is a flourishing, if small scale, employment sector. Employed people, are good for the economy: the widest possible employment base, better still. Why should the employees of archaeology be sacrificed to the narrow financial interests of the building sector? In whose interest is this finally? Not the nation's, either culturally or financially. Cuts in archaeology do not create more jobs, it destroys them; and just puts more money in the pockets of the building magnates. To what pressure are the politicians bowing? Howard Brenton the dramatist once came up with a line that still seems to me a somehow remarkably good definition of what culture is. As I understand it (or misquote it) he called it, "That good which is between us". Archaeology belongs to that good, it belongs to a society that believes we work, we earn, we learn, to create a society, and not just to create money. Of course, maybe I'm missing the point. Campaign Message ? - GnomeKing - 30th March 2011 "Archaeology belongs to that good, it belongs to a society that believes we work, we earn, we learn, to create a society, and not just to create money." :face-approve: Campaign Message ? - P Prentice - 30th March 2011 ergo - archaeology is one measure of a society that believes there is more to life than money Campaign Message ? - P Prentice - 30th March 2011 The All Party Parliamentary Archaeology Group http://www.appag.org.uk/mps.html are bound to listen as will there advisors http://www.appag.org.uk/advisory.html Campaign Message ? - GnomeKing - 30th March 2011 not sure if that is sarcasm P. ..... ? Campaign Message ? - P Prentice - 30th March 2011 not sure either |