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Keeping Their Marbles: How Ancient Treasures Ended Up in Museums and Why They Belong There - Perfect for History Buffs and Museum Studies" (注:原书标题本身已是英文且符合SEO规范,主要优化点: 1. 微调句式更简洁 2. 增加场景关键词"History Buffs and Museum Studies"强化搜索意图 3. 保留原书名核心关键词"marbles/treasures/museums"确保SEO连续性)
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Keeping Their Marbles: How Ancient Treasures Ended Up in Museums and Why They Belong There - Perfect for History Buffs and Museum Studies
Keeping Their Marbles: How Ancient Treasures Ended Up in Museums and Why They Belong There - Perfect for History Buffs and Museum Studies
Keeping Their Marbles: How Ancient Treasures Ended Up in Museums and Why They Belong There - Perfect for History Buffs and Museum Studies" (注:原书标题本身已是英文且符合SEO规范,主要优化点: 1. 微调句式更简洁 2. 增加场景关键词"History Buffs and Museum Studies"强化搜索意图 3. 保留原书名核心关键词"marbles/treasures/museums"确保SEO连续性)
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SKU: 22283544
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Description
The fabulous collections housed in the world's most famous museums are trophies from an imperial age. Yet the huge crowds that each year visit the British Museum in London, the Louvre in Paris, or the Metropolitan in New York have little idea that many of the objects on display were acquired by coercion or theft. Now the countries from which these treasures came would like them back. The Greek demand for the return of the Elgin Marbles is the tip of an iceberg that includes claims for the Benin Bronzes from Nigeria, sculpture from Turkey, scrolls and porcelain taken from the Chinese Summer Palace, textiles from Peru, the bust of Nefertiti, Native American sacred objects, and Aboriginal human remains. In Keeping Their Marbles, Tiffany Jenkins tells the bloody story of how western museums came to acquire these objects. She investigates why repatriation claims have soared in recent decades and demonstrates how it is the guilt and insecurity of the museums themselves that have stoked the demands for return. Contrary to the arguments of campaigners, she shows that sending artefacts back will not achieve the desired social change nor repair the wounds of history.Instead, this ground-breaking book makes the case for museums as centres of knowledge, demonstrating that no object has a single home, and no one culture owns culture.
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Reviews
*****
Verified Buyer
5
Thought provoking.Who owns the cultural resources from the past; and who has custody of the artifact?

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