XClose

Centre for Critical Heritage Studies

Home
Menu

CCHS Seminar series with Katie Meheux - DATE CHANGED -

10 December 2019, 1:00 pm–2:00 pm

UCL archaeology nazi book

CCHS Seminar series: ‘Books have their own destinies’. Examining and assessing controversial rare books and their value for Cultural Heritage by Katie Meheux, UCL Institute of Archeology

Event Information

Open to

All

Availability

Yes

Organiser

Cecile Bremont – Centre for Critical Heritage Studies

Location

Drayton House B06
Drayton House
30 Gordon street
London
WC1H 0AN
United Kingdom

Due to strike action this talk has now been postponed by a week - however venue and time are unchanged.

 

Books and libraries form a vital aspect of cultural heritage. Many historic books and manuscripts are physical objects of great beauty and value, agents of cultural memory and symbols of power, identity, learning and ‘progress’. But there is also a dark side to rare books; they can be ‘troublesome’, gruesome and disturbing, uncomfortable symbols of discredited ideas and ideologies. Their continued existence challenges our comfortable certainties, our creations of history and heritage and stir up old hatreds and fears. 


How can librarians manage dissonant, disturbing books? Do we hide them? Destroy them? Or learn from them, even if the knowledge we gain might not be as comfortable? This talk aims to examine these questions using historically-collected Nazi Archaeology books from the Institute of Archaeology Library collections, looking at the purpose, production and movement of these books in Nazi-dominated Europe and their ‘afterlife’ in the post-war world, particularly the Institute of Archaeology, assessing the varying, often surprising responses  and attitudes to them. For books have their own destinies, independent of what we may wish or intend. 

Photo: 2019 © 'Die Vorgeshichte der Germanen' book by Katie Meheux

About the Speaker

Katie Meheux

Librarian at UCL Institute of Archaeology

Katie Meheux is Librarian of the UCL Institute of Archaeology Library and holds responsibility for the library’s collections, both current and historical. An archaeologist by training, she also researches and writes on the history of 20th century Archaeology. Katie is a member of HARN (History of Archaeology Research Network) and a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries.  

 

 

More about Katie Meheux