Liburnians and Illyrian Lembs. Iron Age Ships of the Eastern Adriatic
暂无分享,去创建一个
and management which result. This is the chapter to share with your environmental consultancy friend to persuade them that archaeology has something to contribute to modern-day management agendas. Finally, Chapter 5, ‘Macabre Simulacra’, examines the curation and ‘display’ of shipwrecks, especially the growing medium of 3D digital visualization or reconstruction. Full of insight into the spectator-spectacle paradigm, this is the chapter which anyone working in public engagement, especially in the museums sector, ought to read and reflect upon as we consider how best with integrity to share the stories of the past. It is a sobering end to a book full of insight, a book that was clearly designed to provoke debate and discussion, but which at heart has a deeply humane commitment towards examining the lives of humans in the past and present alike with humble and compassionate respect.
[1] P. Wilson. The Island City of Tinnīs: A Post Mortem , 2022, International Journal of Nautical Archaeology.
[2] L. Casson. Ships and Seamanship in the Ancient World , 1973 .