The kind of liberal and open-minded society on which most academics rely to freely conduct their research is increasingly under threat, even within democratic societies of long standing. The past is by no means neutral in this, whether this be the then American president threatening to attack the antiquities of Iran in early 2020 (a war crime if carried out), or a right-of-centre UK politician using a prehistoric henge monument to argue that Britain's future should lie outside the European Union (Brophy, Reference Brophy2019). These kinds of developments are generally described as ‘populist’, a term that refers to the simplification of complex problems and appeals to broad sectors of the population. Here, we follow Müller (Reference Müller2016: 3–4) in arguing that ‘populism’ also implies exclusionary and polarizing identity politics in which difference and dissent are treated as moral failings rather than questions for compromise. This frequently includes an element of anti-elitism. Such a discourse has often (though not universally) been associated with the right of the political spectrum, and many authors in this contribution thus begin by tracing its roots in nationalism (e.g. Martin Furholt) or directly addressing national populism (e.g. Elisabeth Niklasson and Herdis Hølleland). However, as Martin Bača reminds us, this is not the only populist strand there is, and we have not imposed an overall definition on our authors. Their arguments will also be applicable to other situations.
Yet, while simplistic election promises sound convincing to increasing numbers of people at both ends of the political spectrum, there is also a growing market for popular histories, including internationally chart-topping works by Yuval Noah Harari (e.g. Harari, Reference Harari2015) and others. Books on archaeological topics can also reach a wide audience, with, for example, volumes on the Nebra Sky Disc and on archaeogenetics ending up on the German Der Spiegel's non-fiction bestseller list in 2019 (Meller & Michel, Reference Meller and Michel2018; Krause & Trappe, Reference Krause and Trappe2019). In addition, social media allow us (and other interpreters of the past) to reach ever greater numbers of people.
The majority of the texts collected here were first presented at a session of the European Association of Archaeologists’ conference in Bern in 2019, which attempted to address this dual development as it has gathered pace over the last decade. While political engagement in archaeology is nothing new—and amongst others includes a long history of feminist scholarship (e.g. Conkey, Reference Conkey2002), strategies for democratization (e.g. recently Milek, Reference Milek2018; Nilsson Stutz, Reference Nilsson Stutz2018), and calls for a greater relevance of archaeology in environmental and social debates (e.g. Kiddey, Reference Kiddey2017; Kohler & Rockman, Reference Kohler and Rockman2020)—here we are particularly concerned with the very current problem of an ever more vocal and pervasive populist debate that threatens the discursive foundations on which rational argument is possible. How should we respond? How can we deal with the sometimes uncomfortable limelight that is increasingly being trained on our discipline? What can be done when the public's expectations, or the use of the past by various actors, run counter to our own convictions (and/or what can be reasonably inferred from the available data)?
There are no easy answers to these questions, but our authors go some way towards demonstrating the variety of the problem across different archaeological fields and in various European regions. While this is first and foremost a call for greater engagement and debate across the discipline, we would argue that a concerted response to such developments entails a two-pronged approach that begins both at a high level of generality and at the level of daily working routines.
The banality of evil
Taking their cue from Hannah Arendt's (Reference Arendt1963) famous analysis of the 1962 Eichmann trial, several contributors (most directly Martin Furholt and Emily Hanscam) point out that the basic tools of archaeological classification and interpretation already come with methodological baggage. Foremost among them is the culture concept, widely critiqued in a variety of research traditions (e.g. Binford, Reference Binford1962; Clarke, Reference Clarke1968; Wotzka, Reference Wotzka and Fröhlich2000) but astonishingly persistent in large swathes of Europe. Using ‘culture’ as a foundational concept is always in danger of succumbing to methodological nationalism (Wimmer & Glick Schiller, Reference Wimmer and Glick Schiller2003) since the concept assumes the homogeneity and internal unity of the entity under study and stresses its separation from others. Yet ‘cultures’ are the basic chronological building blocks of prehistory in many countries (Roberts & Vander Linden, Reference Roberts and Vander Linden2011; Ivanovaitė et al., Reference Ivanovaitė, Serwatka, Hoggard, Sauer and Riede2020). Radiocarbon dating, an obvious alternative, is sometimes explicitly mistrusted, and typological systems seen as providing greater chronological precision. In a self-perpetuating spiral, this means that few good-quality 14C dates are available to build secure absolute chronologies (the allegedly well-studied Linearbandkeramik is a case in point, as the protracted exchange among Jakucs et al., Reference Jakucs, Bánffy, Oross, Voicsek, Bronk Ramsey and Dunbar2016; Bánffy et al., Reference Bánffy, Bayliss, Denaire, Gaydarska, Hofmann and Lefranc2018; Strien, Reference Strien2017, Reference Strien2019 illustrates), effectively forcing researchers to continue using ‘culture’ designations, with all attendant problems intact.
Recent aDNA studies have been criticized for perpetuating and biologizing this unsatisfactory model through the use of ‘culture’ names to refer to groups of samples (Frieman & Hofmann, Reference Frieman and Hofmann2019; for first steps towards a solution, see Eisenmann et al., Reference Eisenmann, Bánffy, Van Dommelen, Hofmann, Maran and Lazaridis2018). Again, this hides diversity, both in the past and in the use of modern-day reference populations which, depending on the aim of the original study from which they are derived, can often lump very large and heterogeneous national groups (e.g. ‘the French’) into a single dot on a graph. This ‘geneticization of notions of citizenship and belonging’ (Pálsson, Reference Pálsson2007: 113), as well as erroneous ideas of ‘isolated’ indigenous populations (Pálsson, Reference Pálsson2007: 157), is widespread, for instance in the creation of databases for medical purposes, and is now also being uncritically imported into past settings, where it compounds our own methodological weaknesses.
Even where ‘culture’ names have largely disappeared from use, problems remain, for instance in the way archaeological entities are often represented on static maps with clear boundaries (critiqued e.g. in Anderson-Whymark & Garrow, Reference Anderson-Whymark, Garrow, Anderson-Whymark, Garrow and Sturt2015). Amongst other problems, these clearly bounded coloured blobs, occasionally connected by arrows, immediately convey a raft of unconsidered assumptions, such as the idea that the movement of people in the past involved large groups moving once from a clearly defined origin to a determined end point (see discussion in Wiedemann, Reference Wiedemann, Wiedemann, Hofmann and Gehrke2017: 145). Such convenient visual simplifications hide the complexity and diversity of the underlying processes, but play to our present perceptions of, for example, migration. Technologies for making more dynamic maps exist; but, in many cases, it remains difficult to find and encode location data, or to deal with often coarsely dated sites spread across databases in multiple countries using incompatible recording systems. Such very basic structural problems are serious challenges to Big Data or synthetic approaches, and there are no quick fixes.
Similarly, Panich and Schneider (Reference Panich and Schneider2019) detail some of the challenges they encountered in trying to document Native American post-1492 persistence in parts of California when there is no consistent way in which this can be recorded in heritage management databases. The resulting casual erasure of Native American voices continues to affect heritage decisions and the presentation of Indigenous history to a wider public. Reversing this trend requires the large-scale modification of databases and the re-entry of records, as well as a substantial financial commitment to using absolute dating methods. In a European setting, and with multiple nations involved, this kind of project would not come easy. It is expensive, but not the kind of glamorous research that attracts substantial funding. Yet, if we want to finally leave behind conventions that are deeply rooted in the nationalist past of our discipline and create standards and protocols fit for addressing new kinds of questions, we must begin with the inherent biases of our everyday working tools.
Bright new futures
At the opposite end of the scale is the question of what kinds of ideas or narratives we can offer our varied publics, and whether simply telling them, as opposed to involving stakeholders throughout the research process, is even enough (see debate in Thomas, Reference Thomas2015; and here particularly Samantha Reiter and Kostas Kotsakis). Contributors to this forum have addressed this from many angles, but there are many more to be covered; the contributions to this volume represent neither every corner of Europe, nor all experiences of European populism.
First is the pervasive idea, evident across many contexts, that heritage sites are primarily about presenting the identity and continuity of a closed group, however defined (e.g. national/ethnic origin, professional, gendered, religious, etc.), rather than envisaged as spaces for dialogue and encounter more generally (see e.g. contributions in Holtorf et al., Reference Holtorf, Pantazatos and Scarre2019). This is explored here by Herdis Hølleland and Elisabeth Niklasson, Håkan Petersson, and Alessandro Vanzetti.
Heritage practitioners have long argued for non-static and diverse notions of a heritage that is above all engaged in generating a future (e.g. Holtorf & Högberg, Reference Holtorf, Högberg, Waterton and Watson2015). Many examples of good practice already exist (e.g. Synnestvedt, Reference Synnestvedt2009; Perry, Reference Perry2019), but the next step is a concerted pan-European effort to lastingly change the agendas of national heritage bodies and funders, and to challenge some of our publics into broadening their ideas about what ‘heritage’ can be. Emily Hanscam, Martin Furholt, Samantha Reiter, Martin Bača, and Kostas Kotsakis variously offer critique and solutions along these lines.
As one contributor to the original session discussion pointed out, archaeologists are very good at knowing what they do not want, but much worse at deciding what they want instead. Indeed, when reacting to populism there is more than one valid strategy, as the contributors to this forum show. But all agree that more communication is central. Although archaeologists such as Gordon Childe and Mortimer Wheeler were once part of more or less explicitly political but very vibrant public debates about history, civilization, and culture (see e.g. Moshenska & Zuanni, Reference Moshenska, Zuanni and López Varela2018; Thornton, Reference Thornton2018), today relatively few of us direct our work at popular audiences. Of those who do, many are professional television presenters rather than active researchers, or they are (frequently early career) academics active in science communication on social media (e.g. the excellent work on Twitter by Flint Dibble (@FlintDibble), Sarah Parcack (@indyfromspace), and Kristina Killgrove (@DrKillgrove) among many others) and a huge variety of international blogs and online initiatives, some run by archaeology students (such as https://anarchaeologie.de/ or https://www.miss-jones.de/). Nevertheless, this is manifestly not enough to shift wider public discourses regarding issues such as a personal connection to the distant past or the biologization of identity.
We would argue that changing the routines of our daily practice and finding the courage to leap into wider social debates are unavoidable, and that our discipline will be harmed if we put this off any longer. There is an obvious role here for international organizations like the EAA, particularly because wider structural change is required. University reward systems and the demands of many archaeological jobs across Europe actively discourage spending time on communicating with the public, which competes with writing the academic papers needed for promotion and is not rewarded by the coveted ‘publication points’ which are the basis for resource allocation in many departments. Similarly, heritage bodies and museums operate within governmental funding structures and constraints, meaning that even carefully considered outreach and education initiatives can fall prey to local politics or perceptions of economic need (discussed here, amongst others, by Håkan Peterssen and Alessandro Vanzetti). While there are steps we can take as individuals, expecting single scholars and heritage professionals to constantly redress much larger imbalances in resource allocation and power structures is not a viable strategy. From campaigning for more media training and more concerted institutional support in dealing with any resulting controversy, to demanding structural recognition for outreach work and forcing critical reflection on the impact of open access policies on different university departments, there is a mountain to climb.
The pieces collected here are intended as a call to arms for further reflection on the problems facing us right now, as well as offering initial suggestions for solutions. They are loosely arranged from those with a more reflexive focus on archaeological concepts and on biases within and outside the discipline to those tracing specific problems (and reactions) in concrete situations, although there is of course plenty of overlap. We hope that together they will stimulate thought and action.
Introduction
The entanglement between archaeology and politics is old news, but the sheer pervasiveness of this relationship and its long-term global impact is becoming increasingly apparent. It is evident that research about the past has great potential to influence the present; not only can our work as archaeologists directly reinforce contemporary structural inequalities such as gender, race, and class but, once we produce knowledge about the past, it can and will be used by anyone, in support of a range of political agendas (Bonacchi et al., Reference Bonacchi, Altaweel and Krzyzanska2018; Brophy, Reference Brophy2018). The relationship between archaeology and the contemporary world must not be understood as a matter of the degree to which research is affected by politics, despite the ease of remaining inside a dualistic perspective that views research on the past as ‘biased’ or ‘objective’, ‘right’ or ‘wrong’. The reality is that all research concerning the past is influenced by politics and contemporary perspectives.
Our world has seen rapid change over the past few years, caused by the swift rise of nationalism and reactionary populism, which has proven itself capable of winning political power, frequently appealing to an idealized view of the past: Trump won the American presidency with the slogan ‘Make America Great Again’. As of late 2020, the political tide in the United States has shifted towards rejecting Trumpism, but it is likely that the nativist movement he inspired, and the white supremacy he legitimized, will haunt the US long into the future. Archaeology is, therefore, becoming even more relevant for questions of identity than ever before. And, as Gardner (Reference Gardner2018: 1) points out, this is a good thing: it gives us the ability to weigh in on public debates regarding the use of the past to inform modern identities.
The problem is that strict categories of identity like nationality, religion, class, gender, and ethnicity have become entrenched; Appiah (Reference Appiah2018: xvi) calls them the ‘lies that bind’. They are valuable and powerful because they allow people to accomplish things together as groups, but it is crucial to remember that all these categories were invented (Appiah, Reference Appiah2018). This does not change the fact that the experience of social belonging is powerful and leads to actions causing ‘imagined origin[s] [to] be translated into social reality very quickly’ (Sommer, Reference Sommer, Cochrane and Gardner2011: 173). Nevertheless, we need to be persistent in exposing flaws in our thinking that lend national and nativist narratives legitimacy. Here, methodological nationalism, i.e. the idea that ‘national identification is a fundamental aspect of human nature’ (Vasilev, Reference Vasilev2019: 3) is key. The nation is popularly seen as one of the most preeminent forms of collective humanity. And yet, the nation was never intended to be ‘the final’ solution (Cannadine, Reference Cannadine2013: 87); the nation is neither inevitable, nor ‘natural’.
The idea of one ethnic group with a shared language, religion, ancestry, and culture occupying a specific territory has colonized thinking so effectively that the nation is both accepted as the ‘default’ mode of human organization and projected back into history. In reality, homogeneous national identities occupying exclusive national spaces are non-existent. Yet they persist in the popular imagination, in part because of the power of national myths. The nation-state as a political body is volatile and problematic, but nationalism itself is imbued with a sense of timelessness, giving it jurisdiction over interpretations of the past (Cinpoeş, Reference Cinpoeş2010: 18). We are, therefore, left with the sense that human societies are destined to be segregated into different nation-states.
This leaves archaeologists, and other scholars of the past, with a choice: once we recognize the continued power of nationalism over history and over contemporary identities, do we attempt to minimize its impact on our work, or do we explicitly engage with the politics of the past?
Political engagement in archaeology
Global politics have undergone a dramatic transformation in the past few years, and a number of archaeologists have recently been calling, myself included (Hanscam, Reference Hanscam2019), for a more politically engaged archaeology (Brophy, Reference Brophy2018; Gardner, Reference Gardner2018; González-Ruibal et al., Reference González-Ruibal, González and Criado-Boado2018; Popa, Reference Popa2019; Kiddey, Reference Kiddey2020). Given the current climate of resurging reactionary populism and far-right nationalism, it is vital that archaeologists, as producers of knowledge about the past, take an active stand against its political misuse. As crisis after crisis unfolds, the voices calling for a more explicit engagement with the political side of archaeology are growing louder.
Is this current the result of a long-term trend or does the movement in favour of a politically engaged archaeology represent more of a watershed moment? It certainly appears to be gaining traction, but it was also rejected only a few years ago, in an article originating from a group discussion panel at the 2015 European Archaeological Association annual meeting in Glasgow. In the forum article ‘What is ‘European archaeology’? What should it be?’ Babić and Robb warn against political alignment, stating that ‘[for archaeologists] to build an emotive commitment to European identity is a bad idea’ (Babić et al., Reference Babić, Karl, Milosavljević, Mizoguchi, Paludan-Müller and Murray2017: 6). It may be that those who rejected a politically engaged archaeology in 2017 still do today, and it may be that those who are now calling for archaeologists to become political actors have long held these views. Kristiansen (Reference Kristiansen2008), for example, has been arguing for years that archaeologists should explicitly build a narrative for Europe.
The point I wish to highlight here is that in five short years (2015 to 2020), the idea of a politically unengaged archaeology has become untenable. It used to be a question that inspired rousing discussion—I was in the audience of the 2015 group discussion panel at the EAAs that inspired Babić and colleagues (Reference Babić, Karl, Milosavljević, Mizoguchi, Paludan-Müller and Murray2017), and I remember being impressed by the variety of opinions represented, and the strength of the conviction behind many. Now that we are all painfully aware of how quickly geopolitical climates can shift, I believe the discussion should change from ‘should we?’ to ‘how best can we become political actors?’. The latter question is not easily answered, but I think that an essential first step involves questioning the assumptions we continue to make because of the power of methodological nationalism.
The postnational critique
The postnational critique can help us question our assumptions. The theory of postnationalism, first developed in the early 2000s, was initially linked to globalization because scholars believed that a postnational, or completely globalized, world was inevitable (Özkirimli, Reference Özkirimli2005). Some argued the world was in a postnational state in the late 1990s or early 2000s, with the move towards multinational bodies like the European Union (Habermas, Reference Habermas and Pensky2001). The theory of postnationalism also acted as a tool to critique nationalism (Appadurai, Reference Appadurai1996: 158), linked to theories of hybridity and new ways of understanding relationships (Sutherland, Reference Sutherland2012: 45). My use of postnationalism aligns most closely with these two critical definitions because I do not see postnationalism as inevitable. Postnationalism is used here as a means of disrupting ‘natural’ assumptions about the status of nations and national identity.
The postnational critique is one potential way forward for political engagement in archaeology. It encourages us to overturn assumptions owed to the influence of nationalism, to examine how our view of the past is constrained in particular contexts, and to contemplate how that past might, nonetheless, have the potential to advocate for more inclusive understandings of human relationships and identities. Methodological nationalism remains embedded within archaeological research because it is not explicitly denied. Meanwhile, archaeology has rightfully hesitated to create authoritative narratives since this can perpetuate the power imbalances critiqued by postcolonialism. Like postcolonialism, the postnational critique aims to dismantle power structures, but we must consider that nationalism has grown in power in part because of aspects of postcolonialism. For the past few decades, multivocality, or allowing multiple voices to come through, has been a popular means of addressing this imbalance. Yet multivocality does not allow us to combat the alternative narratives of extremist groups, such as those on the far right, which have become increasingly influential since 2016 (González-Ruibal, Reference González-Ruibal2018a). We must find a way to combat these narratives, since, as we have discovered with the Brexit process and the Trump presidency, allowing them to remain unopposed has consequences which were unimaginable only a few years ago. Furthermore, right-wing accounts in particular draw on archaeological sources of information to construct their narratives (Bonacchi et al., Reference Bonacchi, Altaweel and Krzyzanska2018; Hingley et al., Reference Hingley, Bonacchi and Sharpe2018); from a certain perspective, it is our responsibility to provide an alternative.
The postnational critique involves two steps: first, to understand how nationalism is created and sustained in a particular context and, second, to study the past to identify what themes emerge through the application of a postnational lens. The postnational critique is also a vision; it is a vision of how our understanding of categories of difference (identities) might change, if we can critique the assumptions on which they were built. It is also a reminder that we cannot allow movements such as far-right nationalism or reactionary populism to drown out our voices and authority, especially if we can demonstrate, clearly and persistently, that these narratives are built on false assumptions about the past.
Postnational themes, therefore, vary depending on the context. In Romania, for example, a key theme is to recognize the long-term impact of migration on the landscape of south-eastern Europe. Present-day Romania consists of a territory that has served as the crossroads between Europe, Asia, and the Near East since the Palaeolithic, with sustained periods of movement like the ‘Age of Migrations’ in Late Antiquity and the early medieval period. The fact that the Romanian national narrative has persistently emphasized an autochthonous population (a population allegedly originating in the Iron Age with the Romans and Dacians) has fostered a national narrative that recognizes the diversity of encounters and the peoples present but does not allow for their agency in the foundation of the Romanian nation. This narrative is heavily entangled with Romanian archaeology (Popa, Reference Popa2015; Popa & Hanscam, Reference Popa and Hanscam2019–2020).
Through the postnational critique, we can shift from a territorial definition of the past to one of connection: we can highlight the encounters taking place, for example, in the region of modern Romania, rather than contrasting migratory peoples against the survival of the ‘autochthonous’ population. Viewing the past in terms of connections is not the only way to understand history, nor is it argued to be the ‘correct’ way; rather, it demonstrates that we must recognize the undue influence nationalism continues to have on our understanding of history. It is also vital that we critique the projection of modern national borders backwards into the past, and the subsequent use of this nationally bounded past to legitimize the present. In emphasizing the absence of a restrictive overarching paradigm through which history is understood, the postnational critique allows us to highlight the numerous encounters and negotiations between people, thereby showing the infinite possibilities the past contains.
In recognition of the consequences of inaction, let us use approaches like the postnational critique which help us in the age of the Anthropocene to ‘rearm to face a capitalism that no longer requires scientific legitimacy’ (González-Ruibal, Reference González-Ruibal2018a). Let us become political actors, engage with the politics of the past, and build a more inclusive future.
Perhaps due to the fascination of the powerful, cutting-edge technology and sophisticated modelling applied in ancient DNA (aDNA) studies, there seems to be a widespread misconception that the information provided by molecular biology should be objective, inherently unbiased, and trustworthy, i.e. ‘hard’ scientific facts as opposed to the ideological, potentially biased interpretative frameworks of the social sciences (Frieman & Hofmann, Reference Frieman and Hofmann2019). Yet, scientific categories are socially constructed and thus subject to the influence of socio-economic interests, ideological agendas, and cultural preferences. While there is no doubt that DNA analyses are measuring real phenomena, at every step of the analytical process, and especially so when creating units of analysis and using those units to reconstruct past human conduct, we are clearly within the field of premises and culturally determined preferences. Unfortunately, in the context of the breakthrough of archaeogenetic methodologies in the last decade (Allentoft et al., Reference Allentoft, Sikora, Sjögren, Rasmussen, Rasmussen and Stenderup2015; Haak et al., Reference Haak, Lazaridis, Patterson, Rohland, Mallick and Llamas2015; Olalde et al., Reference Olalde, Brace, Allentoft, Armit, Kristiansen and Booth2018, Reference Olalde, Mallick, Patterson, Rohland, Villalba-Mouco and Silva2019), too little effort was put into scrutinizing the categories applied in modelling prehistoric social processes. In fact, the most outdated and flawed concepts of social group organization and migration, dating back to the early days of culture historical archaeology, were chosen. The idea of ‘archaeological cultures’, representing closed and static groups as well as distinct biological populations, and the corresponding idea of collective mass migration as the main driver of change, has long been debunked. For third-millennium bc Europe, the result was the simplified narrative of ‘the Yamnaya people’ (represented by the ‘Yamnaya culture’) ‘migrating’ from the Eastern European steppes westwards, there creating the ‘Corded Ware people’ and later the ‘Beaker folk’ (represented by Corded Ware and Bell Beaker ‘cultures’).
The archaeological culture is not a neutral tool to classify archaeological material, but a version of an anthropological concept stemming from a colonial and culturally narrow mindset (Tylor, Reference Tylor1871), later adopted by archaeology; it is based on a specific view of human nature and sociality permeated by right-wing ideologues in a nationalist, chauvinist, and racist Zeitgeist during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Its leading proponent, Gustaf Kossinna (who wrote on the origins of the Germans in Reference Kossinna1911), famously saw prehistoric archaeology as an ‘outstandingly national science’ (the subtitle of his Reference Kossinna1912 work) (Veit, Reference Veit and Shennan1989; Trigger, Reference Trigger1989: 163). This concept has a nefarious power that is contaminating our current discourse (Furholt, Reference Furholt2018, Reference Furholt2019a, Reference Furholt2021; see also Hanscam here). Baked into it is the premise of a monothetic configuration of social groups, which, in accordance with Kossinna's fascist worldview, were seen as clearly bounded, static, culturally and racially distinct, and homogeneous. Agency is assumed to be collective (expressed by a strong male leader), and any kind of change is primarily portrayed as playing out between these collective units. The concept was created with the intention of proving the superiority of one or some of these ‘cultures’ to justify territorial claims, and cultural and militaristic imperialism. This was criticized early on (e.g. Wahle, Reference Wahle1941), and its ideological closeness to Nazi ideology was widely recognized after the Second World War (Veit, Reference Veit and Shennan1989; Härke, Reference Härke and Ucko1995).
Overall, the concept of archaeological cultures has been utterly deconstructed time and again (Childe, Reference Childe1933; Clarke, Reference Clarke1968; Lüning, Reference Lüning1972; Hodder, Reference Hodder1982; Shennan, Reference Shennan and Shennan1989; Wotzka, Reference Wotzka1993; Müller, Reference Müller2001; Roberts & Vander Linden, Reference Roberts and Vander Linden2011). Yet, many scholars (e.g. Childe, Reference Childe1933; Lüning, Reference Lüning1972), probably the majority, claim that it may be possible to maintain the archaeological culture as a useful heuristic tool for classification, stripped of its ideological connotations. This has now, I would argue, terribly backfired. The ideological baggage of the archaeological culture is so strong that it continues to contaminate the archaeological discourse today, as illustrated by two recent examples.
To move the discussion about third-millennium migration forward, Kristiansen and colleagues (Reference Kristiansen, Allentoft, Frei, Iversen, Johannsen and Kroonen2017) proposed a more sophisticated migration model than the one initially constructed (Allentoft et al., Reference Allentoft, Sikora, Sjögren, Rasmussen, Rasmussen and Stenderup2015). This is a good piece of academic work. It discusses social processes of human movements, features specific migrating groups as subunits of ‘Yamnaya’, uses anthropological models, and explicitly theorizes what effects migratory processes would have on the archaeological record. It does, however, take the ‘archaeological cultures’ of the third millennium bc (Yamnaya, Corded Ware) as a starting point, although these do not play a central role in the model Kristiansen and colleagues present. Nevertheless, the conceptual baggage comes to the fore when all nuance is stripped away in the model's popular adaptation (Barras, Reference Barras2019), which presents a simplified narrative not far from the one criticized above: hordes of young men from the east, who are referred to as both culturally and biologically distinct, invade Europe, kill all the local men and mate with the local women. Likewise, a scientific paper concerning the population history of the Iberian Peninsula (Olalde et al., Reference Olalde, Mallick, Patterson, Rohland, Villalba-Mouco and Silva2019) was used by the popular media to present a simplified narrative of invasion and genocide, prompting a concerted critical response by a larger group of archaeologists (Valera et al., Reference Valera and Criado Boado2018).
In both cases, good and genuine scientific work was too easily turned into narratives of culturally and genetically distinct groups collectively acting and fighting each other to extinction. Such narratives are troublingly close to the worldview of many far-right, anti-humanist ideologues, and are already being exploited by such actors (as discussed in Frieman & Hofmann, Reference Frieman and Hofmann2019). At the core of most neo-fascist or white-supremacist ideologies is the belief that today's socially constructed, historically situated identity groups (nations, ethnicities, races) are based on biological differences, and that these biological differences entail differences in characteristics and abilities, making one group superior to others. Additionally, women are seen as inferior to men, and as less important social agents (see Frieman & Hofmann, Reference Frieman and Hofmann2019). Furthermore, this ideology is built on the belief that there was and, indeed, should always be, competition between these groups and that the superior group should prevail and survive at the cost of the others. This worldview represents a targeted attack on the humanist core of the humanist Enlightenment project (e.g. Mason, Reference Mason2019). Such a portrayal of prehistory as a ‘clash of cultures’ scenario with racist and sexist undertones, would lead a regular newspaper reader to gain the (erroneous) impression that this fascist worldview is supported by hard science and archaeological knowledge (Frieman & Hofmann, Reference Frieman and Hofmann2019).
Clearly this is not the intention of the geneticists and archaeologists involved. It is instead the result of a structural problem, brought about by the ideological baggage ingrained in the tradition of archaeological thinking, most clearly encapsulated in the dominant concept of the archaeological culture. The archaeological culture does not only, as many works have demonstrated, blatantly misrepresent the archaeological material (Müller, Reference Müller2001; Vander Linden, Reference Vander Linden2006; Furholt, Reference Furholt2009), it also has never been and can never be a neutral tool for classification because it presupposes a monothetic structure of human groups, which is an ideological credo of the political right wing. Using the concept predetermines the outcome, which is a prehistory made up of monothetic units, easily translated into the idea of a prehistory consisting of distinct peoples. As we have seen, this is re-emerging in the new archaeogenetic studies. It shows the concept reproducing itself.
More than fifty years ago, David Clarke (Reference Clarke1968: 300) suggested polythetic classification as a feasible alternative method. This avoids the ideological, monothetic premise and is much better suited to identify all kinds of settings in the archaeological record. It can create units of different shape, connected to different intersecting spheres of social practices and things, and identify sharp or blurred borders between units; it is thus much less susceptible to the erroneous equation of archaeological units with a specific bounded group of people (Furholt, Reference Furholt2019b). To give an example, in the case of the third-millennium bc mobility discussed above, only a polythetic approach can show that the new genetic component (steppe ancestry) identified in burials labelled Corded Ware and Bell Beaker is actually connected to a new set of burial expressions rather than specific forms of material culture (Furholt, Reference Furholt2019a). This provides a more detailed insight into processes of mobility and social change than the monothetic model. Although Clarke's polythetic classification has been cited and recommended repeatedly (Eggert, Reference Eggert1978; Lüning, Reference Lüning1979), its application is more rarely seen (Müller, Reference Müller2001; Vander Linden, Reference Vander Linden2006; Furholt, Reference Furholt2009). It seems that this lack of impact is owed to the more complex picture that emerges from this kind of analysis even though it is probably closer to the complexity of social reality (Furholt, Reference Furholt2019b).
Populism has become mainstream again in the liberal democracies of Europe. It is certainly not hot news in the eastern part of Central Europe, but it was only after populism had its first major victories in the anglophone milieu that academics in the humanities and social sciences finally woke up and started sharing their opinions on the subject (Cox, Reference Cox2017). Archaeologists are no exception here and are appealing for radical action in defence of liberal democracy in its full sense (González-Ruibal et al., Reference González-Ruibal, González and Criado-Boado2018), critically analysing Brexit, predicting the post-Brexit era (Schlanger, Reference Schlanger2018), or fighting to save the project of the European Union (Popa, Reference Popa2019).
Populism today is no longer an amalgam of masses disillusioned with liberal democracy. Today, it is organized by well-funded and well-structured political parties. These populist parties are more than just vehicles for votes (Steenvoorden & Harteveld, Reference Steenvoorden and Harteveld2017); their supporters share an ideology (Golder, Reference Golder2016) which is often fuelled by falsely constructed narratives of the past and the future. While populists in the past pioneered the misuse of mass media, especially radio and films, today's populists are skilled manipulators of social media such as Facebook and Twitter (Wodak, Reference Wodak2015). Social media are full of hate and the misapplication of language and vocabulary. Their management is ruefully weak in making their environment safe from harmful narratives which are often constructed and fabricated by anonymous entities. It is now fully recognized that Brexit was heavily influenced by this particular weakness of the social media; the mythical narratives of the past directly involving the topics covered by archaeology were part of the Brexit movement discourse and were misused for constructing political identities (Bonacchi et al., Reference Bonacchi, Altaweel and Krzyzanska2018).
Once again, we are reminded that, whether we like it or not, archaeology is and always will be political (Shanks & Tilley, Reference Shanks and Tilley1987; Trigger, Reference Trigger1989 [2006]) and the past is prone to misuse. I fully agree with the effort of my colleagues to directly engage archaeologists in fighting populism (Gonzáles-Ruibal et al., Reference González-Ruibal, González and Criado-Boado2018; Popa, Reference Popa2019) but, even if the menace is the same, the battlefield is rather diverse across Europe. I suggest, and will explain here, that some countries of the former Eastern Bloc, exemplified here by former Czechoslovakia, are fighting this war on a different footing.
Basic framework
In What is populism, Jan-Werner Müller (Reference Müller2016) provided a useful methodological tool for identifying populist agendas in contemporary political, social, and academic discourse (see also Taggart & Kaltwasser, Reference Taggart and Kaltwasser2016). The key attributes of populism, according to Müller, are criticism of the elites, anti-pluralism, moral superiority, and identity politics.
Most of the populism we see corrupting liberal democracies today is linked to various far-right movements and far-right political parties (Golder, Reference Golder2016). In their reactionary nature and the mythical and idealized version of the past they pursue, they are dauntingly close to Fascism.
Far-right populism is, admittedly, not the only type. Former Czechoslovakia provides us with a clear example. Although a beacon of liberal democracy during the interwar period in Central Europe, Czechoslovakia was sacrificed first to Nazi Germany and then to the communist Soviet Union. While people were not widely exterminated as in the Nazi era, the enemies of the state, of ‘the people’, were still named, hunted, and persecuted. The chief goal of the communist regime in Czechoslovakia was the same as that of Nazi Germany: to control, oppress, impose, and dictate the official state doctrine. Both regimes feared the free academic institutions as much as they feared the free press and free cultural institutions. A free-thinking intellectual was an enemy of the state, and free speech was feared the most. The language of the academy therefore had to be the language of conformity, of empty praise to the regime, of empty praise of the people, and of hate towards others (Krekovič & Bača, Reference Krekovič and Bača2014). But more important than what was said was what was not and could not be said; intellectuals in unfree regimes had to be made to believe what the state wanted them to believe and speak only as the state allowed them to speak.
Imagine you endure this for decades, for almost half a century. Imagine, further, how much time it takes to heal such a society, to rebuild the pillars of liberal democracy once again.
Implications for archaeology
Voters who are socially frustrated are attracted to the nostalgic nature of populist ideologies (Golder, Reference Golder2016; Steenvoorden & Harteveld, Reference Steenvoorden and Harteveld2017) and often exploited by far-right movements and political parties that provide false narratives of a great past. This phenomenon is understood in archaeology mostly through the prism of nationalism (Brück & Stutz, Reference Brück and Stutz2016). While this is certainly also true for Slovakia (Krekovič, Reference Krekovič2007), populist narratives both there and in the Czech Republic are also especially nostalgic of the communist era. It is a shared phenomenon typical of post-communist countries of the former Eastern Bloc, constantly fuelling utopian dreams of a new, better tomorrow (Velikonja, Reference Velikonja2009). While Western liberal democracies are seen as suspect and the USA as a dangerous entity by a significant percentage of the population, there is relatively high praise for the ruling Russian government in former Eastern Bloc countries (Globsec, Reference Globsec2018). Many people are thus prone to believe official state propaganda of pan-Slavic tendency, pseudoscientific movements (Čižik & Masariková, Reference Čížik and Masariková2018) and ‘antifascist populism’ that has nothing to do with real anti-Fascism. Finally, and most importantly, this holds true not just for the population who remembers the communist era, but also for the young who did not experience the communist regime at all. It is most significant in countries which are already governed by populist parties with totalitarian attributes, such as Poland and Hungary (Globsec, Reference Globsec2018).
A key task for archaeologists is to engage against populism on multiple fronts. First, it is necessary to realize that populism is related to a crisis of political identity (Müller, Reference Müller2016). In the eastern periphery of the EU, the recent past brings back multiple traumatizing memories, including: the Holocaust; the displacement of whole population groups who had lived there for centuries (i.e. Germans in former Czechoslovakia); the restriction of freedom; collectivization; the uncontrolled and brutal entry of capitalism after the fall of communism, which led to increasing poverty and organized crime; the abandonment of Roma people; and environmental issues. These events left unhealed scars which we must bear in the increasingly faster-moving and more globalized twenty-first century.
The past, the present, and the future are intertwined and the same applies to archaeology. Ideological restriction and non-existent freedom of speech and/or research led to a theoretically underdeveloped archaeology. I believe that this theoretically underdeveloped archaeology has serious limitations for sufficiently explaining the many sensitive issues of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries to the general public (see also Gramsch, Reference Gramsch, Bintliff and Pearce2011). It is unacceptable for archaeologists, who are among the most competent at explaining the past, to leave this field to amateurs and politicians. Beside a more developed theoretical archaeology, studies dealing with the age of modernity are largely missing. We need to better understand the struggle against Fascism in the 1940s and the extent of collectivization in the 1950s. We need to remind ourselves about the German minority that significantly contributed to the culture of eastern Central Europe. We need to acknowledge the Roma people, another forgotten but ever-present ethnic group with a seriously broken identity. In the eastern periphery of the EU, we finally need to acknowledge women and other marginalized groups, be they of race, faith, or sexual orientation.
We must banish the growing antagonism. We can no longer allow populists to dominate the political discourse with concepts borrowed from the humanities (Laclau, Reference Laclau2005), in our case archaeology. We need to replace the concepts that are abused by the populists with new, human-friendly content (see also Rybár, Reference Rybár2020). So, when archaeologists speak, they will also speak with the language of the forgotten.
Finally, archaeologists from the former Eastern Bloc countries should remind other countries what happens when academic freedom is lost to populism. It is an invaluable experience and should be disclosed whenever necessary.
Conclusion
It may seem that archaeologists are engaged in a hopeless fight against this tsunami of populism in the early twenty-first century. Milan Kundera (Reference Kundera1984), in an influential essay titled ‘The tragedy of Central Europe’, wrote that the real tragedy of Central Europe was not the Soviet Union but Europe itself, because it no longer perceives itself as a value. Not so much has changed and the European Union, which should represent the essence of what it means to be European, is increasingly seen as a burden. The current situation is, therefore, not the fault of governments outside the European Union, who may or may not support the populist parties in Europe. It is our fault.
Former Czechoslovakia is a typical example of an atmosphere in which populism was reaching its final stage. Contrary to most Western countries, both countries of former Czechoslovakia have direct experience with two totalitarian regimes known for their heavy populist agendas lasting almost five decades, as have surrounding countries such as Poland and Hungary. Half a century of populism has left its mark on the population, which eagerly listens to the populist agendas of today. Contemporary populist narratives in these countries are a mix of far-right and far-left ideology and vocabulary. Therefore, when new narratives of eternity (Snyder, Reference Snyder2018) emerged, some were shocked because they remembered the past, and some listened closely because this is exactly what they wanted to hear again.
Attacking academic freedom should be seen as an act of violence against democracy. Maybe we should again shame and discourage governments that flout academic and political norms which are crucial for liberal democracies. A free academia is one of the pillars of liberal democracy and it loses its legitimacy when the populist agenda attacking it is not countered. As history has taught us, every time there is a move against academic institutions, the humanities and social sciences suffer the most.
While there are hundreds of well-written papers dealing with the social and cultural welfare of people, and while academics around the globe are working hard for a better understanding of humanity and for a means of fighting populism of any sort, most of their papers are hidden behind paywalls. Capitalism is stronger than ever, while the pillars of democracy are systematically being undermined. The papers and slogans that are harmful to democracy are free and available to everyone through social media. Academia is living in its ivory tower while most people out there have forgotten we even exist. Or in the worst case: are we the elites they are fighting against?
Hobsbawm (Reference Hobsbawm1992: 3) wrote ‘nations without a past are a contradiction in terms’. By doing archaeology at the trowel's edge (Hodder, Reference Hodder1999: 92–98), we have a hand in manufacturing the past. By making history, we contribute to the building of nations. It is well known, therefore, that archaeology is and always has been political (Trigger, Reference Trigger1984; Kristiansen, Reference Kristiansen1993; Rowlands, Reference Rowlands, Bond and Gilliam1994). Yet, since the Second World War, some subfields of archaeology have allowed themselves to be crippled by the abuses to which it was put during that era (Arnold, Reference Arnold1990; Veit, Reference Veit and Härke2002; Brather, Reference Brather, Schlanger and Nordbladh2008). Since then, many scholars have locked themselves away from the political world, claiming that they want to ‘just do archaeology’. Unfortunately, this professed policy of non-interference is both ineffective (e.g. Wilks, Reference Wilks1985) and hugely detrimental to archaeology's relationship with the greater socio-political communities of which it is a part.
A recent study of European citizens showed that this professed ideal of political non-involvement runs directly counter to the public's expectations of what archaeology should be: ‘The role of archaeology is clearly associated [by the public] with understanding the present and passing down this knowledge to younger generations’ (Marx et al., Reference Marx, Nurra and Salas Rossenbach2017: 2). While the material subject of archaeological study may be the past, its input is both expected and sorely needed in the present. An archaeology that exists in isolation from modernity will soon make the discipline obsolete but, as González-Ruibal (Reference González-Ruibal2014: 44) puts it, ‘an archaeology that is relevant helps us to think and problematize society (past and present)’. This is not to suggest that archaeologists should act as a kind of moral gatekeeper (see Popa, Reference Popa2019) since ‘the choice between all the potential arguments that history can potentially provide ultimately depends on the values and principles that individuals and groups decide to sustain and the context within which they operate’ (Bottici, Reference Bottici, Cerutti and Lucarellil2008: 54; see also Recabarren et al., Reference Recabarren, Nussbaum and Leiva2007). Indeed, the public role of archaeology should be one in which we responsibly provide a historical framework for current debate. The director of the District Six Museum in Cape Town, South Africa, Bonita Bennett, describes the challenges of this position:
‘Giving up narrative control has been…a challenge. We witness the telling of uncomfortable stories which do not always align with our institutional identity. We have to be vigilant, to resist the impulse to script and sanitize—unintentionally or otherwise, as we attempt to model a space for multiple, contested narratives’ (Bennett, Reference Bennett2012: 322).
The role of archaeologists and of archaeology, however, need not and should not be merely to set the stage for others to interpret the results of our research and data. We can and must play an active role in this. In recent years, González-Ruibal and colleagues (Reference González-Ruibal, González and Criado-Boado2018) have urged archaeologists to rally in defence of the European Union. The underlying message of this landmark publication has global relevance: if we do not wish others to use our research to concoct unsanctioned stories or political agendas, then we need to interpret that research ourselves and must do so clearly and concisely.
In order for our voice to be heard, the medium and language of those communications should be intended for the general public rather than academia (Risse, Reference Risse, Herrmann, Risse and Brewer2004; Bond, Reference Bond2018). Unfortunately, little media training exists within university archaeology programmes. As a rule, archaeologists have more experience of being the subject of media debate than being its driving force. This state of affairs must change if we are to take part in public discussion.
One scholar who has taken dissemination into his own hands is Maikel Kuijpers of Leiden University. A recent documentary he produced in association with The Craftsman Initiative entitled The Future is Handmade (The Craftsman Initiative, 2019) is both academically rigorous and profoundly relevant to present-day society, such as jobs, capitalism, and the ‘user-friendly’ movement. When I questioned him further about his collaboration on the project, he said, ‘The medium certainly matters. One of my popular academic papers has about 3500 views now on Academia.edu. The documentary has over ten times that many views. That is a big difference in terms of impact and where that impact is made’ (M. Kuijpers, pers. comm.).
Fortunately, there has been a recent blossoming of what one might call ‘soft science reporting’. Some scholars have also been active in publishing reflective docudrama-style written memoirs of their research careers (Barley, Reference Barley1983; Maples & Browning, Reference Maples and Browning1994; Prentiss, Reference Prentiss2012; Willerslev, Reference Willerslev2012; Frei, Reference Frei2018; Reich, Reference Reich2018), though such accounts remain too few. These types of public outreach efforts are often well received by the general public but all too often these kinds of publications are frowned on by the academic community. This unwillingness to engage has created a niche market for journalists who specialize in synthesizing the accounts of a specific area within academic research, such as Zimmer's (Reference Zimmer2011, Reference Zimmer2018) two recent accounts of genetic work, or Johnson's (Reference Johnson2015) account of archaeology. Happily, there are other possibilities for those of us who want to engage with the public but who lack confidence or need additional journalistic support to do so. The Conversation, for example, which includes articles written exclusively by researchers and academics with the aid of journalist support staff, bills itself as ‘academic rigour, journalistic flair’.
It would be hubristic and naïve to advocate engaging with the public and current socio-political affairs without making space for the conversation to flow in both directions. Pentz and colleagues (Reference Pentz, Varberg and Sørensen2019: 3) write that ‘it has long been recognized that people want to take an active role in interpreting the past. The past presented “as it was” through a single lens of interpretation that excludes other voices easily becomes arrogant’. As modern archaeologists, we are the lucky heirs to the arrival of multimedia to new museological approaches and new generations of the web (Hoffos, Reference Hoffos1992; Halpin, Reference Halpin1997). In addition to collaborations between amateurs and professionals such as the Danish Danafæ and the British Portable Antiquities Scheme, examples of the shift to user-generated content include the Danish National Museum's Din Ting/Vores Historie (Your Things/Our History) as well as the 2020 En skat til Danmark (A Treasure for Denmark) exhibition, the British Museum's History of the World in 100 Objects and the British Museum and University College London's collaborative MicroPasts project (see also discussion in Frieman & Wilkin, Reference Frieman and Wilkin2016). Including the public in what we do is just as important as discussing results openly in a public setting. Archaeology as an interface between politics and the public can do more than educate and entertain; it can challenge our present ways of thinking and make us examine the entirety of who we were, who we are, and who we might one day like to be as a society.
Engagement with the past is a dirty business. If we want history to be relevant today, we cannot set it on a pedestal. We need to interact with it, play with it, debate it, and think with it. Ideas about the past evolve, so our engagement with them should too. There must be room for error since this is how we will collectively learn about the past and from the past. Through our interpretations of the past—and our engagement with it—we make it ours, we make it about the present, and we make it something to think with. How we do archaeology and how we present the past to the public involve negotiation with the present, and each time the results of an archaeological study are published those words echo far. Archaeologists may not speak as one, but archaeology has a voice. Let us use it.
In Italy, archaeology is seemingly not particularly relevant for populist feelings; nevertheless, some significant populist entanglements exist, which intertwine with longer-term political and economic trends (Pulselli et al., Reference Pulselli, Sani, Goffetti, Coscieme and Bastianoni2019).
Populism in its present-day form has substantially replaced the corporate and class struggle typical of the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries, and populist arguments were already strong in the growth of Fascist and Nazi dictatorships in Europe; they also generally supported autocratic governments of the Soviet bloc.
Sketched out roughly, populism is now a typical post-ideological behaviour (Aslanidis, Reference Aslanidis2016). As a ‘thin-centred ideology’ (Stanley, Reference Stanley2008), it is mutable and can ‘be easily combined with very different (thin and full) other ideologies’ (Mudde, Reference Mudde2004: 544), such as Socialism, Liberalism, Fascism, and so on. As populism relies on people, it appeals to the personal interest, or sometimes selfishness (or even greed), of individuals or independent corporate groups, fitting coherently within the present-day capitalist world. In political terms, this is the consumer-voter perspective, as a direct (populist) relation is stimulated between the individual's choice and the producer's or politician's decision (Schwarzkopf, Reference Schwarzkopf2011). The anarcho-individualist approach (different from social anarchism) is a relevant populist attitude, but what principally characterizes present-day populism is the self-centred view of personal appropriation and defence of property.
A basic aspect of populism is the stated distinction between ‘the pure people’ versus the ‘corrupt elite’ (Mudde, Reference Mudde2004: 543; Boeri et al., Reference Boeri, Mishra, Papageorgiou and Spilimbergo2018), whereby the ‘pure people’ are a loose and mobile interest group. The people/elite divide is, in fact, the first ‘ideological regularity’ of different populisms (Galli & Garzarelli, Reference Galli and Garzarelli2019). The three others are: nationalist orientation (from separatist to whole-nation), promotion of short-term policies based on demagogy, anti-immigration and anti-globalization pressure.
In politics, Italy is characterized today by strong populist tensions, which have evolved over a considerable number of years. They are mainly expressed by two political parties: the League (formerly Northern League), which moved from a separatist position based in northern Italy (1989–2017) to a nationalist, sovereignist Italian perspective (since 2017), and the Five Star Movement, founded in 2009, which sees itself as neither left-wing nor right-wing.
Within archaeology, four types of popularizing communication and practice can be identified, as outlined in Table 1. A-type academic communication is challenged by C-type arguments, which see institutional archaeology and history as elite-driven and masking the truth in order to keep control, or for mysterious goals. The B-type represents the politically-driven support for some kind of historical identity against other choices, as a myth of purity, perfection, or lofty ethnic and cultural values. The D-type is practised by non-professional archaeologists acting as gifted interpreters, surging to the forefront against the elite represented by official archaeologists or historians. These interpreters start from the bottom up, but soon acquire a kind of A-type top-down narrative, promoting their alternative versions.
Archaeological populism in Sardinia
Sardinian archaeology has long been entangled with local autonomist or separatist issues centred on the ‘constant resistance’ of Sardinians against invaders (e.g. Lilliu, Reference Lilliu2002). Nowadays, Sardinia is a marginalized region with an evident divide between the touristy coast and the impoverished inland (Vanzetti, Reference Vanzetti and Stoddarin press). A clear contrast is visible between diverse and permeable groups of local historians and self-claimed experts (type C attitude) and official archaeologists (represented as the elite). This is particularly evident in the interpretation of Bronze Age Nuragic society. The elites are believed to hide and distort the evidence of Nuragic strength and greatness, as well as proofs of early astronomical knowledge and writing. Consequently, discussion of the Mediterranean connections of the Nuragic Late Bronze Age is often removed from the debate, as there is an (official) fear that it could create dangerous links with the so-called fanta-archaeologists (fanta being an abbreviation of fantasy/fantastic: D'Oriano, Reference D'Oriano and Usai2014).
Some popularizing experts of D-type stress the anti-elitist divide, the most prominent being the journalist Sergio Frau (Reference Frau2002), who claimed that Sardinia could be identified with Atlantis, ultimately destroyed by a Bronze Age tsunami (Evin, Reference Evin2015). Frau's approach was taken up in the top-down populism of political origin (B-type), with support from the Sardinian regional government and from UNESCO representatives, who sponsored exhibitions in high-profile venues such as the Maison de l'UNESCO in Paris in 2005 or Cagliari airport (2017–2018). Frau has claimed support from official archaeologists and from geologists who endorse the tsunami theory explained in his bestselling books. In November 2020, a television programme on the Italian State Channel RAI 3 re-hashed the theory, first broadcast in 2002 and involving the same geologist, Mario Tozzi, as partner and supporter.
The Calabrian passion for purported megaliths
In Calabria, an Italian region with some of the lowest economic and welfare indicators and a strong mafia-like illegal presence (the ‘Ndrangheta), some impressive rock outcrops have been labelled as human-made ‘megaliths’. This C-type attitude is sustained by local volunteers, historians, and scholars, sometimes even including geologists or fully-fledged archaeologists. In some cases, the megalith supporters attract the attention of the local administrations in a populistic process stimulating small-scale B-type interventions, as in Sardinia. No archaeological remains have—so far—been found in connection with these definitely natural monuments (Johnston, Reference Johnston2002). In this case too, but less strongly than in Sardinia, the underlying message is that official archaeology chooses to hide important evidence of local greatness and a powerful past, which, populists argue, would generate income from tourists.
Creating a Celtic identity in northern Italy
A mythical past—this time concerning a unified Po plain identity named ‘Padania’—is foundational to the Northern League party (now League party; Albertazzi, Reference Albertazzi2006). The party think-tanks proposed the Celtic past as the unifying national phase of northern Italy: Celts settled there after migrating across the Alps and even defeated and sacked the hated central power of Rome in 390 bc. The native descent of the Padanians had to be recognized in a proud, independent, and anti-Roman people. One strategy involved the promotion of public celebrations of ‘Celtic’ identity, such as Celtic festivals with re-enactors, Celtic music, and historical foods. More complex archaeological elements, such as the variety of ethnic components in the Po plain or the different cultural history of the Venetian region and its strong ties to Rome, were downplayed. The Northern League also offered a special provision of four billion Italian lire (more than two million euros) as part of their populist ‘Celts Project’ (Friuli-Venezia Giulia Regional Law 2/2000). Although some state and university archaeologists were able to broaden the spectrum of research beyond these narrow goals, the result has indeed been a strengthening of populist feelings towards a Celtic past, which spans only three to four centuries of local history. Indeed, in 2001, Trieste, the capital of Friuli-Venezia Giulia, launched the active and popular Celtic Triskell Festival. This sort of populism in the form of festivals can be understood as a mix of political top-down and revenge bottom-up B- and C-type actions (with some pseudo-Celtic feelings) and pure enjoyment.
Conclusions
A roughly Marxist analysis proposed some years ago regarding the populist attitudes of Sardinian (and Calabrian) revenge archaeology noted the connection to regions suffering social fragmentation and economic and cultural marginalization (Pulselli et al., Reference Pulselli, Sani, Goffetti, Coscieme and Bastianoni2019; Vanzetti, Reference Vanzetti and Stoddarin press). The two situations are different: Sardinia has an average GDP higher than the other southern and island regions of Italy, but a fundamental divide exists between the towns and tourist coast and the socially fragmented and economically impoverished hinterland. The idealized revivalist (and revenge) aspirations of the local population develop in this context, where archaeological looting, aimed at finding bronzes to be sold on the illegal market, notably the bronzetti figurines, is still widespread.
Calabria, by contrast, is one of the poorest regions of Italy, with a strong ‘Ndrangheta criminal element, and revivalist/revenge archaeological dreams (less acute than in Sardinia) are likely to be connected with both frustration and positive aspirations. Admiration for the greatness of the archaeology of Magna Graecia is strong, as is the search for extraordinary findings in less spectacular earlier periods. Illegal excavations and looting are also frequent.
The pressures of B-type Celtic populism were stronger when the Northern League had a clearer autonomist/separatist position. This focus has now reduced. By contrast, while Italian nationalist populism could reclaim a Roman tradition, this is as yet underdeveloped even by right-wing, post-fascist parties, possibly because of the pan-Mediterranean and European heritage of the Roman Empire.
In sum, the populist forces’ relative lack of interest in archaeology and the strength of the academic and heritage sectors have so far limited the use of Italian archaeology for populist discourses, and the existing cases can be read through the economic lens of local development.
I am writing this note in 2020, while many Brexiteers celebrate Britain's official exit from the European Union and, in the United States, Donald Trump's support does not wane despite his unprecedented obduracy to accept the 2020 presidential election result and his pending impeachment trial. These are the outward signs of the populism that sweeps the world, West and East. It is no longer just some people believing in outrageous conspiracy theories. Racism, sexism, xenophobia, and revisionism have cast a heavy shadow on politics, emphatically showing that this wave leads to politically dangerous waters. Between tragedy and farce, populism threatens the core of democracy, the idea of an open society with a shared basis, as founded by modernity. Conversely, populism's crude outlook celebrates the gap between the elite and the people. Although defining populism is notoriously complicated and falls outside the present remit (De Cleen & Stavrakakis, Reference De Cleen and Stavrakakis2017; Stavrakakis, Reference Stavrakakis, R. Kaltwasser, Taggart, Ochoa Espejo and Ostiguy2017), here I define populism as the belief that the world is structured along one simplistic, hierarchical dichotomy. Conspiracy theories are its inevitable product.
What can archaeology, with its elitist legacy, do against this current? Archaeologists need to remember that the massive appeal of fringe ideas is much more than a mistake that archaeology can correct; it results from a real lived experience of disenfranchisement and loss of dignity. These extreme views come from a simplifying distortion of a traumatic reality that directly affects people's lives. Undoubtedly, it involves a shockingly false reading of the facts but, unfortunately, this does not make the perceived reality less compelling.
The island of Lesvos in Greece can serve as a case study for archaeology's difficulty, even bewilderment, to cope with local populist politics. Thousands of refugees come to the island every year via Turkey. The state puts them in open refugee hotspots, leaving them stranded among a local population of a few tens of thousands. It is easy to see how local populists exploited this dire situation for political gain, undermining the local people's initial goodwill and hospitality that attracted much positive international attention.
The anti-immigrant feelings, fed by the inadequate management by the state, quickly led to a surge in xenophobia. Overwhelmed by the scale of events, the local authorities failed to relieve the pressure from this outbreak. Archaeology, in particular, was not prepared to engage with people from vastly different cultural, historical, and social backgrounds. The numerous NGOs involved in educational and cultural activism did not include archaeology in their plans, nor did other institutions, e.g. the university on the island. The example of Lesvos makes us wonder whether archaeology, as practised, has any part in the battle against populism. Possibly, as Hamilakis (Reference Hamilakis2018) has proposed, archaeologists should resort to political activism but, although I do not underestimate political action, I doubt that it will answer archaeology's problem.
One tested and increasingly employed archaeological tactic of engagement revolves around ‘heritage’ (see other contributors to this section). Like museums, which have evolved from national treasuries of the past into educational centres cum amusement parks, archaeology has turned to cultural heritage as a social obligation and an almost mandatory way to meet the public (see critical discussion e.g. in Waterton & Smith, Reference Waterton and Smith2010; Winter & Waterton, Reference Winter and Waterton2013). Heritage is considered a public good by definition. The idea is that the attractively documented presentation of the past will automatically illuminate the audience. Yet this optimistic scenario never happens in real life, as the proliferation of post-truths and conspiracy theories channelled through the media proves.
Like historians (Kalela, Reference Kalela2012), archaeologists have always selected their audiences—real or imagined—and archaeology has been comfortable speaking to one assumed unified national audience. In today's self-reflexive spirit, the selection is neither innocent nor straightforward; many different audiences are out there. Laclau (Reference Laclau2005: ix–x) explains why: society is not a harmoniously functioning whole but a ‘constitutive impossibility’ that contains an endless contradictory movement. The result is smaller, fragile entities, which Laclau calls demands. Demands cluster around absences—perceived or real—in social relations: inclusion where there is exclusion, justice when there is injustice, etc. In other words, society comprises many different groups of people with differing agendas.
Knowing our audiences and their demands is, therefore, the priority when dealing with a populist discourse. In the Paliambela Kolindros project (Chowne et al., Reference Chowne, Kotsakis, Orbasli, Hodder and Louise2007), the aim was to involve the local rural community in managing an Early Neolithic site (c. 6600 bc). We first surveyed the local people's perceptions and mentalities, exploring how they saw archaeology. We used questionnaires, filmed interviews, and conducted a systematic ethnographic study of the population (Parlani, Reference Parlani2014). Only then were we able to target our activities to specific groups. The diversity recorded helped us think beyond the strictly archaeological subject and gave us the possibility to design a management plan that allocated activities, narratives, and interpretations based on people. González-Ruibal et al. (Reference González-Ruibal, González and Criado-Boado2018: 508–09) have rightly cautioned against the dangers of underestimating the diversity of audiences with which archaeology wishes to engage. Our experience with the small group of people of Paliambela shows that defining our audience's diversity makes it possible to connect people with the materiality of objects and re-establishes ties and memories of their own lives. An Early Neolithic sickle blade presented to senior community members drew out lifelong harvesting experiences and informed our archaeological interpretations. It was a moving spectacle to see elders retrieve their old, unused sickle and proudly perform a harvesting demonstration (Halstead, Reference Halstead2014: 77–121 and figs 3.7 and 3.8). Similarly, a Neolithic grinding stone brought memories from childhood and raised questions of gender, labour allocation, and cooking. Without resorting to elite knowledge, we engaged people of different ages and genders with our archaeological project to benefit both.
Meeting the challenge of identifying the ‘stakeholders’ is crucial to empower the public. Lamentably, archaeology's relations with its audiences have long been dominated by cultural elitism, in other words, by the fetishization of expert knowledge. Cultural elitism, which disregards the actual people in the present, has been sharply criticized in the heritage debate (Waterton & Smith, Reference Waterton and Smith2010; Winter & Waterton, Reference Winter and Waterton2013). Nevertheless, expert knowledge is still considered central by archaeologists who feel that the communities’ involvement exposes them to the risk of becoming ‘just another interest group’ (Smith & Campbell, Reference Smith and Campbell2018). At the opposite end of the spectrum stands what has been called ‘epistemic populism’, a term with negative connotations signifying the readiness to consider knowledge produced from communities as epistemic, subaltern knowledge (Grosfoguel, Reference Grosfoguel2011). As a justified reaction to the exclusion of communities from their heritage, multiculturalism and multivocality need not lead to epistemic populism if applied in a context of dialogue and mutual understanding, as at Paliambela Kolindros. Again, getting to know the audience helps overcome the ethnocentric and essentializing prejudices of archaeology.
In effect, archaeology must become less narcissistic and renounce its urge to hegemonize all discourse about the past, thereby disempowering people (Stavrakakis, Reference Stavrakakis, R. Kaltwasser, Taggart, Ochoa Espejo and Ostiguy2017). González-Ruibal et al. (Reference González-Ruibal, González and Criado-Boado2018: 507–09) refer to people who, although exposed to archaeology and modernity, do not have an official notion of heritage or are entirely indifferent to it. In a pilot ethnographic field study intended to investigate attitudes towards the cultural landscape in six villages in northern Greece (Tryfinopoulou, Reference Tryfinopoulou2010), we found that the communities, mostly descendants of refugees from Anatolia who arrived there one century ago, could not identify anything of cultural significance in their region. The only exception was one specific location said to be reminiscent of the fields around the ancestral village in Turkey. Given the Greek state's tight control on heritage and archaeology's critical role in supporting national narratives (Kotsakis, Reference Kotsakis and Meskell1998), such a lack of interest in the official heritage narrative is puzzling.
It may be that the hegemonic state control of heritage (in Greece, archaeology is exclusively a state service) had not penetrated these communities yet. Alternatively, local identities determined by the scale and nature of the communities’ conflicts or demands (e.g. refugees vs local people) opposed the official narrative. Either way, exploring the public's attitudes towards archaeological heritage is a priority (Kajda et al., Reference Kajda, Marx, Wright, Richards, Marciniak and Rossenbach2018), principally since state archaeology in Greece has so far been reluctant to abandon the well-established encultured nationalism of the nineteenth century and continuing to the present day (Kotsakis, Reference Kotsakis and Hodder1991; Hamilakis & Yalouri, Reference Hamilakis and Yalouri1996; Damaskos & Plantzos, Reference Damaskos and Plantzos2008). In this respect, I believe that distancing from state and nation narratives will become essential to counteract narratives that both end up reinforcing parochial accounts or populist agendas.
As archaeology's symbolic capital in an advancing global, predatory capitalism is rapidly diminishing, and its ‘use’ for validating the national narrative is fading (populists just do not need it), archaeology must redefine itself and reform its practices. If working with our audiences has become our primary obligation, including media and institutions (Bernbeck & Pollock, Reference Bernbeck and Pollock2018), but especially algorithms that widely disseminate ‘post-truths’, the new mission is to know all these in depth. In this presentist objective, a sensible strategy is to seek the cooperation of experts so that the archaeological task is not demoted. As González-Ruibal (Reference González-Ruibal2018b: 18) remarks, ‘it is not really useful to take the robes of other disciplines: anthropologists do better anthropology and historians better history than us’. Given that the scope of Greek state archaeologists’ duties and activities are strongly regulated by the state, and since there are no freelance archaeologists, such external cooperation may be our only realistic chance. In this dystopic contemporary political landscape, archaeology and archaeologists must reflect on the gambit between dispelling populism and a drastic re-evaluation of archaeology's interaction with society. Otherwise, political populism will become cultural and rapidly consume the ‘public’ irrevocably.
One aspect of populism and archaeology is the commercial use of archaeology by the popular cultural tourism industry all over the world. In Scandinavia, the Vikings are more attractive than ever, particularly in relation to cruise tourism. Cruise ships are an essential part of the tourism sector in western Norway. In Stavanger alone, a town of approximately 120,000 inhabitants, some 300 cruise ships brought an estimated 500,000 passengers in 2019, generating considerable profits. To attract cruise ships, a port must offer unique experiences. Tourist activities, therefore, are of great political and commercial interest as stops to compete for cruise liner traffic. To this end, exciting stories of seafaring Viking explorers and brave warriors have increasingly become the focus of government institutions, private commercial interests, and museums in Norway. At the official institution Visit Norway, Viking-related sites rank among the top tourist attractions (https://www.visitnorway.com/things-to-do/art-culture/vikings/top-sites/).
In the Stavanger area, the focus is on the Norse sagas’ description of the Battle of Hafrsfjord. The Battle of Hafrsfjord in ad 872 is described as a bloody sea battle between Norwegian chieftains, in which the losing side was slaughtered (Fidjestøl, Reference Fidjestøl, Vea and Myhre1993; Titlestad, Reference Titlestad and Nitter2011). While most research regards the consolidation of Norway as taking place about 300 years after that battle, local historians (Titlestad, Reference Titlestad and Nitter2011, Reference Titlestad2018; Grøsfjeld, Reference Grøsfjeld2018), interest groups, and other stakeholders (Risa, Reference Risa2018) paint the battle as key to the creation of the Norwegian kingdom, in an attempt to capitalize on the Vikings for tourism purposes (Figure 1).
The Viking stereotype sold to the public focuses on a courageous, androcentric society, steeped in violence and based on pillaging. Yet, almost everything about the battle is uncertain: its location, the way it was fought, whether it really was a battle, whether it was fought on land or at sea. The opponents are even said to have come in knarrer, i.e. trading ships, rather than the warships one might expect. The story told by the archaeological evidence is much more variable. There are indications of possible maritime looting, in the form of Irish-made prestige artefacts, but otherwise most of the material indicates wealthy burials, self-supporting farmsteads, local craft production, and indications of regional trading sites. When considering gender issues, the region also has very rich female graves, such as the ‘Gausel queen’, Norway's richest female Viking Age grave (Børsheim & Soltvedt, Reference Børsheim and Soltvedt2002: 179–93).
The commercialization of national identity and cultural heritage
The focus here is not the historical accuracy of the sagas, but the use of the battle and Viking stereotypes as commercial tools, that is capitalizing on history for political and/or economic purposes. The latest example of this phenomenon was when politicians and tourist providers proposed a new, large visitor centre on the shores of the bay of Hafrsfjord (Risa, Reference Risa2018). The goal was to create a public arena to attract tourists to the alleged battle site, reinforcing the importance of the region in Viking history and in the establishment of the Norwegian kingdom, and emphasizing the Vikings’ political influence in Western Europe.
The Viking House, a privately funded, commercial attraction located in the harbour next to the cruise ship disembarkation point is another initiative. Here, visitors can purchase souvenirs and books and watch a VR-film presenting the history of the battle based on the sagas. However, these attractions are not alone. The outreach activities of Stavanger's Museum of Archaeology also cater for what is popular, focusing on the Vikings. The museum's Viking exhibition, while generally nuanced, flirts with the dominant Viking stereotypes while avoiding addressing the issue. Instead of contrasting popular images of history with empirical facts, little explanation is offered for pieces such as a berserker podium (Figure 2) placed in an exhibition focusing on wealthy female graves. While the exhibition was remodelled in autumn 2020 and the podium moved, it is still there and the bookshelves in the shop still present a traditional, androcentric view.
The Vikings, a Scandinavian tourist brand?
Even though Viking tourist attractions use the same rhetoric as earlier political nationalists, the use of the Vikings has shifted from reinforcing national identity to economic opportunism. What can be capitalized on is politically and economically attractive, and what sells seems mostly to be the same brutal, androcentric narrative that has prevailed since the period of national romanticism. Fifty years of modern research and archaeological discovery appear to have had little impact. These Viking stereotypes are part of our identity and are now used by the tourist sector—government-funded organizations, commercial enterprises, tour providers, and open-air heritage parks—as the cultural brand (Holtorf, Reference Holtorf2007) of western Norwegian history. These agencies’ goal is to attract capital and interest to the region, since tourism is an important financial sector.
This outreach environment is, whether we like it or not, forcing museum professionals to adapt. Our institutional hegemony as interpreters and exhibitors of history is gone. The situation is escalating, and I feel that the response of my former employer, the museum, and similar institutions, shows how unprepared the sector is to address these questions. We oppose such developments and at the same time compete with new players to attract the public.
Should we rather work with commercial outlets to ensure that a more comprehensive image of the Viking period and Norwegian history as a whole is presented to consumers? Museums and academic representatives of knowledge-based interpretations need better strategies to function in an environment which mostly caters for what is popular. This requires a more developed, critical methodology and theoretical awareness, a goal yet to be achieved. Research principles from academic fields such as museum studies are poorly integrated in the collective outreach awareness, which is built more on traditional academic disciplines and ideals and the need to attract the public.
Self-awareness at the museum
The actions of museums seem to reflect frustration at not being the main outlet chosen by politicians, government organizations, and tour providers for promoting Viking history, as well as showing that they are ill-prepared for dealing with the academic aspects of the situation. It is also frustrating that research-based knowledge has so little influence over what is popular. Once again, it is something museums do very little to resist, instead steering much of their outreach activities towards that same populism to compete for visitors.
Instead of the proposed new visitor centre at Hafrsfjord, the Stavanger Museum suggested using its own open-air historical park, Jernaldergarden (Iron Age Farm), a reconstructed Migration-period farmstead on Hafrsfjord bay, as a centre for public outreach on the Vikings and the Battle of Hafrsfjord (Madsen, Reference Madsen2018). In doing this, the museum should have reflected on what narratives are constructed when presenting mixed historical facts in public outreach and how a knowledge-based accuracy in outreach activities can be retained. Instead, the museum chose to use the farm as an arena for an increasingly popular view of the Viking Age.
To me, it feels like territoriality. A new Viking visitor centre only 500 m away from the Jernaldergarden would seriously threaten attendance numbers, easily making the attraction economically untenable. I would suggest that letting the Migration period be what it is and participating in a new Viking centre might have been a better choice.
In this way, we accept the loss of our interpretative hegemony in a new environment of public outreach and try to work within the framework of both the needs or goals of the tourist providers and our need for historical accuracy. Through close involvement, we are better placed to balance both sides, to attract tourists while contextualizing and addressing the anachronisms and the images of what is popular. One way forward could be to use contrasting views or ideals side by side, making people see things in the much broader context of societal development over time, and challenging our own beliefs and prejudices as visitors.
Final thoughts
As providers of an archaeological, knowledge-based outreach, we need ways to popularize other images of the Vikings than the tradition of heroic pillaging enshrined by national romanticism. We also need better ways of marketing our narratives. We need strategies for sustained collaboration with commercial interests if our goal is to promote and foster a modern, knowledge-based public perception of history in today's commercial outreach environment.
We need to be at the forefront of this. The creation of The Viking House, discussed above, is an ideal example. If, instead of being passive spectators, we had been active participants, we could have influenced the outcome, ensuring a balanced presentation of both archaeological evidence and the saga. The suggested content of the proposed visitor centre at Hafrsfjord, promoted solely by non-professional stakeholders and backed by political interests, would have served to reinforce the androcentric stereotypes to thousands of visitors from all over the world. If we focus less on protecting our own existing visitor sites, and instead actively participate in the development of new visitor attractions outside our institutions, the storytelling presented to tourists could be more comprehensive. Many of the stakeholders involved want accuracy, but they must also be able to capitalize on their efforts.
Therefore, rather than hoping that the ideas of political and commercial projects will go away, our strategy must be one of flexibility, integration, and involvement, with a focus on guiding a project towards knowledge-based presentations and interpretations.
We must also open a debate among the different views and ideals of history both in our engagement with the commercial tourist sector and in our own outreach activities. Rather than flirting with the popularity of the atrocities of seafaring warriors, idealized as heroic narratives and rendered inoffensive by the passage of time, we could contextualize these stories of slave traders and murderers in accordance with modern research and modern values. In the end, what difference is there between the idealized view of Viking raiders and modern murderers and slave traders? The historical memory presented is also very short. The Viking Age is the brief outcome of long-term processes extending over the course of the Scandinavian Iron Age and ending in medieval, urban society. The period of Viking raiding was an even shorter phase within this process, so let us focus on the whole picture and make it exciting.
From a modern, democratic standpoint, and to prevent offensive populism in archaeological outreach, overemphasized stereotypes should be contrasted with the evidence from history. Deconstructing them in favour of modern, humanistic narratives of history can have a long-term effect on our idea of national identity. This implies shifting focus from national ancestral histories to a more human-based understanding of the Viking Age. In this, a change in the historical narratives presented to the public is an important step in steering away from more toxic forms of nationalism.
The ‘politics of fear’ (Wodak, Reference Wodak2015) exercised by radical and populist right-wing parties in Europe ought to concern archaeologists and heritage professionals for several reasons. The most immediate for us is these parties’ enthusiasm for the distant past. Through symbolic manifestations, such as the Greek Golden Dawn's annual rally at the archaeological site of Thermopylae (Sotiris, Reference Sotiris2015), the Italian Lega's use of Celtic imagery (Albertazzi, Reference Albertazzi2006), and the promotion by the French Front National (now rebranded as the Rassemblement National or National Rally) of medieval sites and festivals (Almeida, Reference Almeida2019), these parties claim ownership of heritage as a national concern. When these claims are translated into actual political proposals, negotiated and sometimes passed in parliaments, it revives an age-old dilemma: the heritage sectors in most of Europe are still closely linked to national governance, making them susceptible to political change. National heritage agencies usually report to central governments, and archaeological activities are regulated by state law and frequently funded by public funds. We are used to experiencing political change through budget cuts or structural reforms, but what happens when expectations of the past change? How are we to respond when democratically elected right-wing populist parties seek to reorient cultural politics to focus only on the ancient sites, monuments, and traditions they see as the essence of national identity? Where do we, as researchers and heritage professionals, set our limit of compliance? The scenario may seem hypothetical, but we do not have to look further than Hungary to see how it could play out, with new institutions distributing alternative narratives of the past (Bánffy, Reference Bánffy, Niklasson and Meier2013). Drawing on our research into the uses of the past by the Scandinavian populist right wing (Niklasson & Hølleland, Reference Niklasson and Hølleland2018), we argue for a heightened preparedness in times of political polarization by means of cross-sectorial solidarity and partnership, as well as reflexivity and resistance.
As a region which has long nurtured its image of equality, tolerance, and welfare, Scandinavia is perhaps not the first place that comes to mind when discussing right-wing populism. Yet, since the turn of the millennium, it has seen three anti-immigration parties claim space in the national parliaments: the Danish Peoples Party (DPP), the Progress Party in Norway (PP) and the Sweden Democrats (SD). When looking in detail at their respective cultural policies and proposals, we found that, for these parties, culture is almost synonymous with heritage (Niklasson & Hølleland, Reference Niklasson and Hølleland2018). The aim of their cultural policy is to strengthen a national identity by protecting and endorsing sites tied to notions of national origins and power, and to nurture rural folklife and the (Christian) traditions of the (ethno-national) majority population. To implement and fund their heritage policies, they seek to steer state funds away from multicultural initiatives and institutions working with contemporary art and world cultures. More than policy content, however, what makes their proposals dangerous is how these parties couch them in an already established rhetoric of heritage democratization. By taking a stand for the ‘real’ heritage of a nation and promising to bring it ‘back to the people’, they co-opt the Scandinavian model of state-subsidized culture—meant to ensure freedom of expression and equal access (e.g. Lindsköld, Reference Lindsköld2015)—to restrict ideas about what it means to belong in Scandinavian societies. While not immediately visible, this can have long-term effects; and, as archaeologists and heritage professionals, we need to generate a sense of preparedness. More than just reacting to the populist right's uses of the past, this requires identifying the political, bureaucratic, and societal conditions that enable right-wing populist tendencies to influence heritage governance in liberal democracies.
For Scandinavia, we identify three such conditions. The first is the destabilization of traditional block-politics in multiparty systems. With regard to heritage policy, our research has shown that the most influential position for a populist right-wing party in Scandinavia is that of support to right-wing minority (coalition) governments (Niklasson & Hølleland, Reference Niklasson and Hølleland2018). From this position, it can be contrary while still enjoying political legitimacy and getting some carefully chosen policies passed. In Denmark, the DPP has successfully made it its strategy to act as a support party for conservative minority coalitions since 2002. This has allowed it to influence heritage governance by increasing funding for its preferred sites, such as the Viking Age rune stones at Jelling, museums representing rural life, royal palaces, and navy ships. In this position, the DPP has managed to promote its policies in exchange for voting with the ruling block. More importantly, it did so without bearing the burden of responsibility or having to compromise as a governing party does. In Norway, the PP lost most of its radical edge once it was ‘sanitized’ and ‘accepted’ into a minority coalition in 2013, in a government that needed votes from other support parties (Bjerkem, Reference Bjerkem2016). The DPP's strategy has only been possible because the political establishment has welcomed it. SD, who is also in opposition, has not been so lucky. Due to instability, however, SD has held the role of ‘scale master’ in the Swedish parliament, able to tip the scales with its vote, but it still faces a cordon sanitaire, with no other parties willing to cooperate on a more permanent basis.
Stretching beyond the multiparty system, the second condition is the relocation of the so-called ‘Overton window’ (named after the American policy analyst Joseph Overton, referring to an idea's political viability depending on its acceptability) (Lehman, Reference Lehman2010). In other words, populist right-wing parties, by constantly proposing shocking measures, can reframe a society's window of ideational and rhetorical acceptance so that policies once seen as radical become normalized. In Scandinavia, the populist right has successfully shifted the window on their core issue of immigration to the point where other establishment parties have either budged or introduced similar policies. Rather than viewing heritage on its own, we therefore need to understand how it operates in relation to immigration policies. While presented as a heart-warming, political goodwill area when discussed by itself, heritage still serves as an instrument of division. In claiming to represent and safeguard the cultural values and material remains of ‘the people’, the populist right's arguments for heritage preservation help shift the window towards intolerance when used as a backdrop and contrast to contemporary immigration. In the visual language of the parties, the former is represented as appealing, with idealized images of what the future may hold with them in power, including blond children playing in the countryside and sunsets over ancient monuments, while the latter promises car fires and invasion if today's governments are left to define the future.
Third, gaps left by changes in governance should be addressed. In particular, we need to carefully consider the consequences of the trend to devolve authority to regional and local levels in the name of democracy and efficiency. As the populist right aspire to shift power from the elite to ‘the people’, neo-liberal de-bureaucratization measures such as those recently introduced by the current coalition government in Norway (Hølleland & Skrede, Reference Hølleland and Skrede2019) can lead to a strategic hollowing-out of expertise. Even if the national heritage sector's call for democratization aligns with populist-right agendas on the surface, it can be a false move that eventually leads to increased political control of heritage—a long-term policy of the PP. Thus, even if the PP is of the opinion that the state (rather than private owners) should carry the financial burden of preserving listed buildings and funding archaeological excavations, the decisions regarding what is to be preserved should lie with ‘the people’ in the form of those elected to local and county governments.
What does this mean for researchers, archaeologists, and civil servants? What should we do when these conditions align? Our call is for solidarity, partnership, reflexivity, and resistance.
By solidarity, we refer to the need to stand up not just for our own field, but also for other cultural fields. When the populist right suggests cutting funds for the arts and multicultural initiatives in favour of archaeology and heritage, it should concern us. By actively siding with those targeted, political goodwill and capital may be at risk, but moral authority—a cornerstone of liberal democratic institutions—is gained. Furthermore, the heritage sector may have a good ally once the tables turn.
By partnership, we refer to the relationship between heritage researchers and civil servants. While relatively independent, there are limits to what Scandinavian heritage institutions can do and what civil servants can say. Equally, there are limits to what heritage researchers can know about the inner workings of heritage institutions (e.g. Hølleland & Niklasson, Reference Hølleland and Niklasson2020). Strategic partnerships could improve knowledge about the contract between the nation-states and their heritage sectors and increase preparedness for political instability.
By reflexivity, we mean not losing sight of the historical legacy of archaeology, which has taught us that we cannot easily dissociate racism from the concept of culture (see also Furholt here). When considering the policies of the populist right, we must be aware that proposals to fund iconic heritage sites and proposals to step up border controls represent two edges of the same sword.
Finally, by resistance, we mean that we must establish limits of compliance, for ourselves and as a sector, and work to uphold those limits at every turn. Archaeology has a history of compliance, from serving colonial empires to oil companies. Where do we draw the line when it comes to the populist right? So far, the reception of the populist right's heritage policies by the heritage sectors in Scandinavia points towards a slippery slope. Responses have varied greatly in the three countries. Archaeologists and civil servants in Denmark have taken advantage of the DPP's rhetoric to boost funding for excavations of Viking Age sites and museums (Jensen, Reference Jensen2009). In Sweden, representatives of the national heritage board have rebuffed SD's talk of a ‘pure’ Swedish past, but when SD arranged a parliamentary meeting to secure funds for the Iron Age site of Uppåkra in 2018, they went along with the show. We believe it is time to have an open discussion about where we stand as a field and formulate archaeo-political strategies based on the conditions of political influence in different regions.
Acknowledgements
SSR gratefully acknowledges M.J. Walsh, J.-L. Renaud, and another anonymous colleague for comments on this manuscript. MB would like to thank P. Pavúk, N. Vlhová, and M. Havlíková for reading and commenting on his paper. KK gratefully acknowledges the editorial help of his friend Sappho Haralambous-Howe. Naturally, the views and opinions expressed here are those of the authors and do not reflect the official policy or position of other agencies.