Published Jun 25 2020

The toppling of statues is a moment in history, not its erasure

The toppling of statues around the world in the past few weeks has left us with confronting images of destruction that remind us of the very active role of the past in the present.

Archaeologists have an unusual perspective on the dismantling of statues. Our instinct to preserve and protect material culture collides with our understanding of the complicated history of engagement with the past, and with the powers these statues represent.

There are many well-known examples to remind us of the very human act of removing figureheads and their symbolic power.

We think of the statues of Pharaoh Hatshepsut, with her face roughly chipped away to rid posterity of the memory of a female king, or the disembodied heads of defeated Roman emperors carried away by their enemies.

The disfigured statue of Pharaoh Hatshepsut.

But other examples tell us of the reworking of the past to comment on the present.

In 2100 BCE, the Mesopotamian king Naram-Sin commissioned a monument to celebrate his victory over the mountain people from the east. In it he stands taller than anyone else, with his foot on the neck of his vanquished foe, and an inscription in cuneiform above his head celebrating his victory.

Some 1000 years later, a king from the eastern state of Elam invaded Mesopotamia, carried off the monument, and retagged it with his own inscription placed over the conquered victim’s head, reclaiming the monument as a testament to his own victory over his people’s oppressors.

We've witnessed this retagging in the past week over and over as people reclaim their history with spray-painted graffiti on statues they associate with their victimisation. A key point here is that the king of Elam had no idea of the identity of Naram-Sin himself. By that time, the monument had become a representation of power, not of an individual king. And if someone had told the Elamites that Naram-Sin was really a great guy (he wasn’t), it wouldn’t have mattered.

The stele of Naram-Sin.

Archaeologists have a peculiar relationship to monuments such as these. Traditionally, we used them to reconstruct “history” – the sequence of kings, the battles fought, the territories conquered.

The stele of Naram-Sin stands proudly on the cover of textbooks about Mesopotamia, but its re-inscription by its victims is almost never mentioned.

When classical historian Mary Beard complained that as much as she decried the racism of Cecil Rhodes, the removal of his busts in Oxford would “rewrite history”, she was thinking of that kind of history.

The Cecil Rhodes statue that's been the target of protesters.

But archaeologists have come to understand that all material objects, like the statues that have been toppling around the world in the past week, are not static repositories of information about the past. They not only represent and transmit the ideologies of their makers, they continue to shape communities’ beliefs and emotions long after their makers and subjects have slipped into historical oblivion.

Archaeologists understand material objects as active participants in the construction of identity, whatever the original intentions of their production were.

Monuments memorialise, but the community memories that are constructed from them are dynamic, and depend almost entirely on context.

When San Francisco this week removed a statue of Christopher Columbus that had been installed in 1957 as a celebration of the Italian-American community, city supervisors had to acknowledge that the statue meant different things to different communities. In the end, the insult endured by the Indigenous communities for so many years trumped (if you’ll pardon the expression) the Italian-Americans’ bid for a connection with the founding of a nation.

Commemorative monuments such as the Stele of Naram-Sin, or any of the statues that have been torn down in the past week, are a special kind of artefact.

Their cost in manpower and natural resources, and their public exposure, almost always mean that they're the product of people in power.

Statues such as those of Captain Cook are, to many, a symbol of death and destruction.

When Prime Minister Scott Morrison defends the actions of Captain James Cook as “enlightened”, he's missing the point. For many people, these statues aren't representations of Cook at all, but symbols of the establishment of colonial Australia, and the death and destruction of thousands of Indigenous communities.

Their very material composition in granite or bronze, their raised position on plinths, their placement in public parks, all define them as symbolic objects, so it's a little rich when their defenders want to treat them as simple portraits. By their very nature, these public monuments move beyond any individual to embody the power of the people who commissioned, erected and maintain them. And icons can very quickly lose the connection with the things they once represented.(Does anyone under the age of 50 see a floppy disk when they look at the “save” icon in Word?)

The past few days have seen lists drawn up: Who stays? Who goes? Who should replace them? But rating the worth of individuals to be put on a public pedestal also seems to miss the point of commemoration.

The faces on statues of Roman emperors could be changed at will as a new family came to power, and it made little difference to the people in the forum.

It's the nature of archaeology to want to preserve and protect material culture.

The site where the statue of Edward Colston stood in Bristol, in the UK.

Our instinct to cheer at the sight of Edward Colston sinking into the harbour makes us pause at our own temerity. But our study of the material remains of the past usually leads us in an entirely different direction. Our stock in trade is the discarded past, not the carefully curated survivors.

We read the subtleties of community identity in broken pot sherds, crumbled houses, and ancient rock shelters. We diagnose economies from discarded ration coupons, clay bills of trade, and piles of fish bone.

If we were looking in public spaces for the values that hold our communities together, we would give the statues a miss. We would look at the remains of the playgrounds with their accessible equipment, at the multi-ethnic, multinational footy and soccer and basketball nets, at the brightly graffitied skate ramps, even at the benches with memorial plaques to a beloved husband ("You got a pizza my heart", reads one in Melbourne's Edinburgh Gardens). It's these mundane material objects that reflect and construct our communities.

Let the statues topple. We'll dig them up one day, or retrieve them from the long-forgotten storage vaults of a museum, and derive more meaning from the fact of their felling than we ever would from the fact that they once stood. The Black Lives Matter tags and broken plinths will write the history of the momentous winter/summer of 2020.

About the Authors

  • Hilary gopnik

    Senior Lecturer, Director, Centre for Ancient Cultures

    Hilary is a Near Eastern archaeologist who specialises in the study of Iron Age Iran and the South Caucasus, with a focus on the Medes of the Zagros Mountains. She is currently the Director of the Centre for Ancient Cultures at Monash University. Since 2008, HIlary has shifted her archaeological focus from Iran northwards to Naxçivan Azerbaijan, where she is the co-director of excavations at the Iron Age (8th to 1st centuries BCE) citadel site of Oğlanqala, funded by the National Science Foundation (USA).

  • Jessie birkett-rees

    Lecturer, Centre for Ancient Cultures

    Jessie’s research engages with the relationships between people and landscape, the archaeology of conflict and commemoration, and the provision of new techniques and technologies in archaeological research. She specialises in spatial analyses, in non-invasive investigation techniques and in the application of Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and geospatial science to model landscapes and address archaeological questions. She has carried out fieldwork in Australia, Canada, Turkey and the Caucasus.

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