Sunday, March 24, 2013

YouTube

Lately, I've been spending more and more time watching YouTube. Not the part of YouTube where cats jump into boxes, but the part I wish I had in high school and struggling through biologyworld history, or physics. Short, fast-paced educational videos like these are all over YouTube and yet, I can't seem to find any for anthropology. Why not? We see the media always blowing up new archaeological finds, especially if it involves a "huge shake-up" of our current models of human evolution.
From Time. October 9, 2006 cover.
These sort of stories pique the interest of people like my older brother, who took an introductory anthropology course at his university because he was interested in finding out where humans came from. I remember him complaining that he had to go through so much material that didn't interest him before they even started talking about human origins--he could have saved the money spent on that class if there were an easier way for him to access the knowledge he wanted.

I don't think the physical classroom can be replaced by a video. But I think having an accessible, entertaining, and accurate introduction to a subject is necessary to capture the interest of future anthropologists. It's great to see these channels popping up to explain the stereotypically difficult courses, but I also think it's time that the social sciences get a YouTube presence.

Edit: I forgot this video existed, but my point that there should be more of these still stands:

"Something tells me that playing Mario party with a Neanderthal would be, like, a dozen different kinds of awesome, but, I guess I'll never know." Hank pretty much sums up my feelings on the subject.


Saturday, March 16, 2013

Plagues and Media

One of the earliest concepts I remember learning, when I started anthropology courses at UVic, is the difference between archaeology in North America and archaeology in Europe. That difference is obvious in this BBC article on possible Black Death victims found during the construction of a high-speed railway through the City of London (which, confusingly enough, is not London). Here, the archaeologists are studying their own history, with the possibility that these remains are their distant ancestors.

From BBC. The archaeological pit found in the City of London.

The discovery in the City of London contrasts with discoveries of First Nations remains here in BC even in the news coverage it gets. In a class I took last semester, Dr. Thom would send us articles having to do with First Nations (sometimes 14 articles a day!) and he would discuss them in class, pointing out the bias that Canadian media has relating to First Nations. One huge controversy we looked at was skeletons unearthed near the Great Fraser Midden in Vancouver that halted the development of a condominium complex, thoroughly annoying the Vancouver Island couple that were financially backing the development. The comments on those articles were disgusting; suggesting that the people buried in that midden were trash because they were found amongst "trash," a poor interpretation of the meaning of midden. In this BBC article, more people are worried that the skeletal remains still contain the plague--they aren't insulting the memory of those ancestors because they stand in the way of development.
From Warrior Publications. Musqueam band members protest the desecration of  c̓əsnaʔəm.

Maybe the solution to this discrepancy is to encourage greater First Nations involvement in their own history. Would our news sound more like the BBC's article if the archaeologists working on a site weren't settlers whose familial presence on this continent only goes back 200 years? When Dr. Thom would bring in elders from the First People's House to speak to our class, they would emphasize the cultural knowledge that we, as future archaeologists, need to keep in mind when digging up a site; for example, the responsibility of a certain family to maintain burial grounds. I wish the First Nations sites around here got as much positive attention as these Black Death victims. We should start that change by working with local First Nations as much as possible, to synthesize their cultural and environmental knowledge passed down over thousands of years with our own archaeological skills.

Sunday, March 10, 2013

This way to the ministry of magic ↓

I was going to write about this new History Channel show called Vikings,* but while browsing through my reading list I found MacKenzie's post about Egyptian graffiti. Having just watched a documentary on Netflix this week on the process involved in deciphering hieroglyphics, the concept of a totally unknown script creating such a mystery was fresh in my mind.

Which then reminded me of a guest speaker in Erin's ANTH100 class three years ago. Genevieve von Petzinger summarized her research on geometric symbols for our class, which analyzed the relationship between supposedly non-symbolic shapes found all over the world; preserved in caves from as far back as 68-80 kya BP! Thankfully, I still had my notes from that class kicking around, and was able to find this webpage that goes into further detail from that presentation. I looked through it and remembered how fascinating I thought those symbols were, and the influence it had on my eventual decision to major in anthropology.

So, going back to the topic of drunkard Egyptian graffiti, I can't help but relate this European cave mystery with the only recently deciphered Egyptian script. If the symbols researched by von Petzinger do have the property of conventionality--that is, if they hold shared meanings among those who used them--then what if some of these inscriptions are in fact ancient graffiti? Perhaps the bored scribbles of a thirteen-year-old stuck in the cave, taking shelter from a storm?

MacKenzie points out that it's easy to separate ourselves from the humans whose cultural remnants we stumble upon. We hold every piece of the puzzle in equal level of significance, whether pyramid or drunken graffiti, and naturally inflate their importance in the story we then tell of our own beginning. It's important to remember that perhaps not all that is preserved is solely indicative of a culture, a species, or an idea. As with everything, sample size matters.

*You'll have to find a way around the outside-of-USA block the History Channel has in order to watch this show, which isn't entirely impossible.


This post's title was inspired by a post from this blog.

Saturday, March 2, 2013

Troublesome Corpses

Over this last week we've been researching the treatment of "revenant" corpses over the last millenium or so. It's amazing to see the kinds of superstitions that arose over the treatment of corpses. In the Ukraine, it was believed that wind passing over an unburied body was enough to reanimate it; the Gypsies believed that any living being crossing over a corpse awaiting burial would be enough to create a revenant. So it makes sense that a similarly varied tradition appeared after the Dark Ages to respond to this "Vampire problem."

There were numerous peoples who believed that vampires exhibited what we might now call OCD behaviours--that they could not cross scattered millet or a dog's body because they could not count every grain or hair by sunrise. Certain woods were believed to have exceptional vampire-taming properties, and strong-smelling herbs such as juniper were utilized by the Gypsies to repel the troublesome revenants. The use of garlic, which we typically think of today as the vampire repellant, was employed by the Romanians.

Tragically, it seems this could have been avoided had our modern science been around to explain the decaying corpse. The apparent growth of hair and nails post-mortem, and the process of decomposition were confused to be the product of an evil force, and as a result numerous bodies were mutilated in response to a perceived supernatural presence. So it seems even more necessary that we remember that our case studies deal with real people, likely with still-living descendants.