Ethics of Egyptology and collecting: Who needs the past? National values and Egyptology

<strong>Egyptology is a political endeavor as well as a science. Research questions are born in a political context and sometimes funded according to political agendas. Egyptology derives political clout from its ability to generate and legitimize myths about the human past that can ally peopl...

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Autor principal: Ossama ABDEL-MAGUID
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: Fayoum University 2014
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C
Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/f9f7b222ac3240e58368b417f742b3f5
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:f9f7b222ac3240e58368b417f742b3f52021-12-02T09:13:19ZEthics of Egyptology and collecting: Who needs the past? National values and Egyptology2356-87042536-995410.36816/shedet.001.10https://doaj.org/article/f9f7b222ac3240e58368b417f742b3f52014-12-01T00:00:00Zhttps://shedet.journals.ekb.eg/article_87660_f9069f82bc9f28fac0838ce759906f1d.pdfhttps://doaj.org/toc/2356-8704https://doaj.org/toc/2536-9954<strong>Egyptology is a political endeavor as well as a science. Research questions are born in a political context and sometimes funded according to political agendas. Egyptology derives political clout from its ability to generate and legitimize myths about the human past that can ally people through investigates the range of ancient Egyptian culture, including the people, language, literature, history, religion, art, economics and architecture. In consequence of their power to create a bridge between the present and the past, Egyptologists are becoming increasingly aware of the ethical implications and consequences of their work</strong>Ossama ABDEL-MAGUIDFayoum UniversityarticleAuxiliary sciences of historyCArchaeologyCC1-960ENShedet, Vol 1, Iss 1, Pp 18-25 (2014)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic Auxiliary sciences of history
C
Archaeology
CC1-960
spellingShingle Auxiliary sciences of history
C
Archaeology
CC1-960
Ossama ABDEL-MAGUID
Ethics of Egyptology and collecting: Who needs the past? National values and Egyptology
description <strong>Egyptology is a political endeavor as well as a science. Research questions are born in a political context and sometimes funded according to political agendas. Egyptology derives political clout from its ability to generate and legitimize myths about the human past that can ally people through investigates the range of ancient Egyptian culture, including the people, language, literature, history, religion, art, economics and architecture. In consequence of their power to create a bridge between the present and the past, Egyptologists are becoming increasingly aware of the ethical implications and consequences of their work</strong>
format article
author Ossama ABDEL-MAGUID
author_facet Ossama ABDEL-MAGUID
author_sort Ossama ABDEL-MAGUID
title Ethics of Egyptology and collecting: Who needs the past? National values and Egyptology
title_short Ethics of Egyptology and collecting: Who needs the past? National values and Egyptology
title_full Ethics of Egyptology and collecting: Who needs the past? National values and Egyptology
title_fullStr Ethics of Egyptology and collecting: Who needs the past? National values and Egyptology
title_full_unstemmed Ethics of Egyptology and collecting: Who needs the past? National values and Egyptology
title_sort ethics of egyptology and collecting: who needs the past? national values and egyptology
publisher Fayoum University
publishDate 2014
url https://doaj.org/article/f9f7b222ac3240e58368b417f742b3f5
work_keys_str_mv AT ossamaabdelmaguid ethicsofegyptologyandcollectingwhoneedsthepastnationalvaluesandegyptology
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