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Archaeology for the public in Greece minus/plus ten
Author(s) -
Stelios Lekakis
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
ap
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2171-6315
DOI - 10.23914/ap.v10i0.303
Subject(s) - context (archaeology) , front (military) , cultural heritage , media studies , history , sociology , archaeology , classics , geography , meteorology
It must have been around ten years ago, when I was invited to present my -shaky then but promising- progress of PhD thesis at the University of Athens, on social and economic trends in heritage management, discussing island cultural resources and the role of the interested communities. I remember myself at the end of my talk, standing in front of a bewildered and intrigued (in equal doses) audience, only to experience the -somehow- apologetic comment of the organising professor to the audience: “I see that we need to look into these things now, that all became science”. I have talked about this memory elsewhere in detail (Lekakis 2015) mainly to pinpoint that even though 40 years of concrete bibliography have then lapsed -McGimsey, for example, produced his seminal volume in 1972- there was still a lack of information about the concept and practices of public archaeology, at least in the Greek academic context.

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