[MSN] Looting of the Iraq National Museum Will be Discussed at Willamette.
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Sep-27-2006 22:27
Looting of the Iraq National Museum Will be Discussed at Willamette
Salem-News.com
Lectures to Address Cultural Heritage Controversies.
Photo courtesy: Ramzi Haidar/AFP
uarts.edu:
http://www.salem-news.com/articles/september272006/iraq_museum_disc_92706.ph
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(SALEM) - Two lectures on cultural heritage issues will be given in October
as part of an international Cultural Heritage Conference held at Willamette
University. Both lectures are free to the public.
Kwame Anthony Appiah will give a lecture titled, "Who Owns Culture?"
Thursday, Oct. 12th, at 7:30 PM in Hudson Hall in the Rogers Music Center at
Willamette. Appiah is the Laurance S. Rockefeller University Professor of
Philosophy at Princeton University. His books include Cosmopolitanism:
Ethics in a World of Strangers.
"Thieves of Baghdad: The Investigation into the Looting of the Iraq National
Museum" will be presented by Matthew Bogdanos Friday, Oct. 13th, at 7:30 PM
in Hudson Hall.
Bogdanos served as deputy director of the Joint Interagency Coordination
Group that led the investigation into the 2003 theft and looting of the
Baghdad museum. Under his direction, a U.S. multi-agency task force was
deployed to Afghanistan, the first time a U.S. team had gone into a war
zone.
Although 7,000 to 10,000 artifacts are missing, including major pieces
considered irreplaceable, the team has recovered thousands of priceless
antiquities. A slide lecture will outline the flourishing black market in
stolen antiquities that is funding the insurgency in Iraq.
Cultural Heritage Issues: The Legacy of Conquest, Colonization and Commerce
is open to the public and brings internationally recognized experts in
archaeology, anthropology, museum studies and law for a critical dialogue
about the legal and ethical dimensions of cultural heritage issues.
"The 2003 looting of the Iraqi National Museum generated international
discussion about the policies of cultural heritage management," said Ortwin
Knorr, coordinator for the Salem branch of the Archaeological Institute of
America and classical studies professor at Willamette.
"There has also been intense debate about the disposition of artifacts
acquired by the Nazis during World War II, the repatriation of classical
treasures like the Elgin Marbles, the final disposition of the
9,000-year-old Kennewick Man skeleton and the Native American Graves
Protection and Repatriation Act," Knorr said.
Other conference speakers include James Pepper Henry, an associate program
director with the National Museum of the American Indian and tribal member
of the Kaw/Muscogee Nation; John Jelderks, the judge who wrote the decision
in the Kennewick Man case; Richard Leventhal, director of the University of
Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology; leading experts from
the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the U.S. State Department; as well
as numerous scholars, legal experts and museum curators from Australia,
Canada, Germany, Iraq, Italy, Nigeria and the United States.
Registration for the conference is free for members of the Archaeological
Institute of America and Willamette students, faculty and staff. For all
others, registration is $90 for the entire conference, including receptions
and lunches. Registration per day is $20, or $35 with lunch. Interested
community members are invited to attend. Registration is due Oct. 9. For
information go to www.willamette.edu/events/chc/ or contact Knorr at
503-370-6029.
This conference is made possible with the generous support of the
Archaeological Institute of America; the Oregon Council for the Humanities;
Willamette University's Lilly Project, College of Law and College of Liberal
Arts; and a Willamette University Canadian Studies Program Enhancement
Grant.
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