In the context of this research, I love the Museum of London - both at the Wall and at Docklands. The people who work there, their use of poetry in the ancient London area, even the odd excitement that the English have with being colonised by the Romans is beautifully contextualised in their museum spaces. Museum spaces that are about place, about
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I think the Romans as context is another one of those embracing otherness over the home culture things, and it's really a shame, because the Britons (and, let's call the people before the Britons for the sake of this, also Britons) deserve it. The Britons and those that wandered over the land when it was still connected to Europe (that was 14000 BC working off memory, don't quote me) really did have an enormous contribution, and we now know that modern humans were in Britain for nearly as long as they were here... so... amazing!
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With the early Britons all we are shown are the stones at Stonehenge, and let's be honest here, they aren't that exciting when you go to visit them to make you stay an awful long time (okay, the cold wind that whips through you makes you head for the gift shop).
Funny that you said that we needed a holiday break from all that... :) We clearly wanted to pass on that holiday feeling to other cultures; plus a bit of sunshine.
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Granted the hunter/gather societies probably have been around for "half a million years" but the herders and farmers are usually associated with the beginnings of agriculture approximately 10,000 years ago.
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Mind you the notion that hunter/gatherers belonged to an earlier time than farmers, is just as ridiculous, because we were hunter/gatherers until 200 years ago (and some folks still were into this century) and we weren't backward or missing a step, it was a legitimate space, but again it becomes measured against Europeans... so... interesting!
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I do agree with you there are still some hunter/gather societies even today, in your home, as well as in Africa and a few other places within the world. But even those societies are starting to disappear within the context of globalization.
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