Our heritage is already broken: meditations on a regenerative conservation for cultural and natural heritage

IF 0.8 4区 社会学 Q4 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES Human Ecology Review Pub Date : 2016-04-08 DOI:10.4225/13/581FCDF8DC329
Michael J. Kimball
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引用次数: 8

Abstract

In 2001, several months before the September 11 attacks on the World Trade Center, the Taliban regime ordered the destruction of all “shrines of infidels” (Manhart, 2009, p. 38), including two colossal 6th–7th century CE statues of the Buddha carved into cliff faces in central Afghanistan’s Bamiyan Valley during this region’s heyday as a Silk Road hub. The demolition of the Bamiyan Buddhas (Figure 1), executed with mortar fire and dynamite and filmed by the Taliban, incited international shock and outrage. How could this destruction have been allowed to happen to such an invaluable historical treasure? These statues had existed for more than 1,400 years and now, in the space of a few weeks, were all but completely erased. In 2003, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) responded by designating the cultural landscape and archaeological remains of the Bamiyan Valley as a World Heritage site and adding them to the World Heritage in Danger List, thereby authorizing their “Outstanding Universal Value” and need for protection (UNESCO, n.d.). Since then, experts have journeyed to Bamiyan to conduct archaeological excavations and shore up
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我们的遗产已经支离破碎:对文化和自然遗产的再生保护的思考
2001年,也就是911袭击世贸中心的几个月前,塔利班政权下令摧毁所有“异教徒的神殿”(Manhart, 2009, p. 38),包括在阿富汗中部巴米扬山谷作为丝绸之路枢纽的全盛时期雕刻在悬崖上的两座公元6 - 7世纪的巨大佛像。塔利班用迫击炮和炸药摧毁巴米扬大佛(图1),并将其拍摄下来,引起了国际社会的震惊和愤怒。这样一件无价的历史宝藏怎么会遭到这样的破坏呢?这些雕像已经存在了1400多年,现在,在几周的时间里,几乎完全被抹去了。2003年,联合国教育、科学及文化组织(UNESCO)作出回应,将巴米扬山谷的文化景观和考古遗迹指定为世界遗产,并将其列入《世界濒危遗产名录》,从而认可其“突出的普遍价值”和保护需求(UNESCO, n.d)。从那以后,专家们前往巴米扬进行考古发掘和加固
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期刊介绍: Human Ecology Review (ISSN 1074-4827) is a refereed journal published twice a year by the Society for Human Ecology. The Journal publishes peer-reviewed research and theory on the interaction between humans and the environment and other links between culture and nature (Research in Human Ecology), essays and applications relevant to human ecology (Human Ecology Forum), book reviews (Contemporary Human Ecology), and relevant commentary, announcements, and awards (Human Ecology Bulletin).
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