A bizarre read, oddly written.
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Kiitos. Käytämme tätä aikajanasi parantamiseen. KumoaKumoa
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I suppose the fact that I can't find it via Google (though I would quite like to) suggests it's not attracting too much attention...
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Added you to the discussion elsewhere- it really has had quite enough of a boost already
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That being said, every archaeologist these days seems to be "discovering", or " re-writing", the "hidden history" of whatever she or he has dug up. The pernicious influence of the RAE/REF. It should be called out more; especially in situations like these.
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yes - we are encouraged to compete and to sell ourselves by the REF and by the media - 'elevator pitches', 'sound bites', 'reveals' and 'USP's - but this seemed a particularly extreme and unfortunate case
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I personally was shocked to read that we could use Stuff What Got Written Down to find out about history, and flabbergasted there were Ordinary Women in the Olden Days. Thank goodness there is a man around to uncover such hidden mysteries.
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And then mansplain it...
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I’m intrigued by this (as a male archaeogist...) but can’t find the piece. Is ‘hidden history’ the language used in an actual article, or journalistic nonsense added on top?
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It's in History Extra and it's abysmal. It reads exactly like Sarah says it does, as if decades of work in this area hasn't even happened. I'm just quietly fuming over the bits about Wynflaed this morning.
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It’s Max Adams, isn’t it?
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@ellen_paterson This was a joke. I looked up the article. It is actually him. - Näytä vastaukset
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