Return to Alexandria: An Ethnography of Cultural Heritage Revivalism and Museum Memory

Return to Alexandria

Return to Alexandria
An Ethnography of Cultural Heritage Revivalism and Museum Memory
by Beverley Butler

The Bibliotheca Alexandrina was launched with great fanfare in the 1990s, a project of UNESCO and the Egyptian government to recreate the glory of the Alexandria Library and Museum of the ancient world. The project and its timing were curious it coincided with scholarship moving away from the dominance of the western tradition; it privileged Alexandria's Greek heritage over 1,500 years of Islamic scholarship; and it established an island for the cultural elite in an urban slum.

Beverley Butler's ethnography of the project explores these contradictions, and the challenges faced by Egyptian and international scholars in overcoming them. Her critique of the underlying foundational concepts and values behind the Library is of equal importance, a nuanced postcolonial examination of memory, cultural revival, and homecoming. In this, she draws upon a wide array of thinkers: Freud, Derrida, Said, and Bernal, among others. Butler's book will be of great value to museologists, historians, archaeologists, cultural scholars, and heritage professionals.

Dr Beverley Butler co-ordinates an MA in Cultural Heritage Studies and lectures in Cultural Heritage Studies, Museum History and Theory, and Cultural Memory at the Institute of Archaeology, University College London.

Left Coast Press (30 Nov 2007)
304 pages
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