Schlagworte:
Digital technology, cultural heritage, National Museum of Iran, Iran-e Bastan Museum, museology, computer literacy, Elam, Elamite art, digital catalogue, Susa castle, Haji Tappeh, Tchoga Zanbil, plundering of museums, archaeological collections, British museum, Louvre museum, intellectual propertyCopyright (c) 2016 ISIMU
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Dieses Werk steht unter der Lizenz Creative Commons Namensnennung - Nicht-kommerziell 4.0 International.
Abstract
Inspired by my recent work in iran - were I was able to compile a digital corpus of material culture related to the ancient Iranian civilization of Elam - I stipulate and encourage archaeological and museological objectives cognizant of twenty-first-century challenges. At its core, this vision is compelled by a philosophical understanding of the museum as a research and didactical institution, while critically considering the complex relationships between museums and politics and the imperative need to merge computer literacy with a sound understanding of the material at hand. At the end it is the archaeologist, I argue, that through our privileged role as interpreters of the material past, together with a full awareness of present cultural realities, is uniquely positioned to advocate for fully-implemented digital museum systems which would make archaeological collections truly accessible to a global audience.