Wednesday, May 4, 2016

In resurrecting HMS Endeavour, we can lay our colonial past to rest | Sarah Cefai

Rather than displaying James Cook’s ship in a traditional museum, why not entrust it to a First Nations co-operative?

News has emerged confirming the whereabouts of the wreckage of HMS Endeavour, a ship sailed by Captain James Cook. Reports invariably contain images of the ship in its pomp, proudly reminding the reader of its British origins and its voyage to the Pacific Ocean, where Cook took possession of Australia. But where should Cook’s ship go? Once we dredge it up, or rather, once the Rhode Island Marine Archaeology Project dredges it up, where should it be put? And will Cook’s ship be allowed to take us beyond our colonial past?

It must be remembered that it is our cultural attachment that will be doing the dredging, our obsession and fascination with these objects that circulate as evidence of the all-powerful histories of empire. Where we decide to put Cook’s ship and its contents will shape where it takes us. Through its presentation we will relate to it culturally; as an object of desire or fascination for some, and boredom for others. We will tell a new story and it will make us feel something.

Related: Colonial ruins are a fitting epitaph for the British empire | Chibundu Onuzo

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Via: Archaeology | The Guardian

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