ID | 135204 |
Title Proper | Culture war |
Other Title Information | the case against repatriating museum artifacts |
Language | ENG |
Author | Cuno, James |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | In December 2007, the Italian government opened an exhibition in Rome of 69 artifacts that four major U.S. museums had agreed to return to Italy on the grounds that they had been illegally excavated and exported from the country. Leading nearly 200 journalists through the exhibition, Francesco Rutelli, Italy’s then cultural minister, proclaimed, “The odyssey of these objects, which started with their brutal removal from the bowels of the earth, didn’t end on the shelf of some American museum. With nostalgia, they have returned. These beautiful pieces have reconquered their souls.” Rutelli was not just anthropomorphizing ancient artifacts by giving them souls. By insisting that they were the property of Italy and important to its national identity, he was also giving them citizenship. |
`In' analytical Note | Foreign Affair Vol.93, No.6; Nov-Dec.2014: p.119-129 |
Journal Source | Foreign Affairs Vol: 93 No 6 |
Standard Number | National Identity |