Chapter 7 Start the Presses? John Alden Mason as Mesoamericanist and a Reluctant New Deal Archaeologist in the 1930s

Bernard K. Means
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

During the 1930s, J. Alden Mason was a curator at the Penn Museum in Philadelphia. He was best known during this time for his work at the site of Piedras Negras in northwestern Guatemala. Yet, the 1930s excavations at Piedras Negras were not published until 2005. This delayed publication prevented other scholars from building on this work. Also, during the 1930s, Mason led lesser-known excavations around the Philadelphia area with federal work relief funding. No field records exist for these investigations, the whereabouts of artifacts are unknown, and only a single short article was ever published on the scant archaeological findings. Exactly what archaeology was done and where through these New Deal investigations is unknown and may be unknowable. Mason struggled with the overly bureaucratic nature of New Deal archaeology, and this might help explain his lack of due diligence with archiving his records, or with completing a properly detailed report. Today's archaeologists deal with similar constraints. But we are also ethically bound to publish our results in a reasonable time frame, rather than hoard our data the way a dragon hoards a mountain of gold. If we fail to meet these ethical principles, we really are little more than well-educated looters.

Abstract Image

第7章启动印刷机?约翰·奥尔登·梅森:20世纪30年代中美洲主义者和不情愿的新政考古学家
20世纪30年代,J.Alden Mason是费城宾夕法尼亚博物馆的馆长。在此期间,他因在危地马拉西北部的Piedras Negras遗址工作而闻名。然而,20世纪30年代在Piedras Negras的发掘直到2005年才公布。这一延迟的出版阻止了其他学者在这项工作的基础上再接再厉。此外,在20世纪30年代,梅森利用联邦工作救济资金,领导了费城地区鲜为人知的挖掘工作。这些调查没有现场记录,文物的下落也不得而知,关于这些稀少的考古发现,只有一篇短文发表过。究竟做了什么考古,以及通过这些新政在哪里进行的调查是未知的,也可能是未知的。梅森与新政考古的过度官僚性质作斗争,这可能有助于解释他在归档记录或完成适当详细的报告方面缺乏尽职调查的原因。今天的考古学家也面临着类似的限制。但从道德上讲,我们也必须在合理的时间范围内公布我们的结果,而不是像龙囤积堆积如山的黄金那样囤积我们的数据。如果我们不能满足这些道德原则,我们真的只不过是受过良好教育的掠夺者。
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