試す 金 - 無料
Bones of contention
New Zealand Listener
|September 20-26, 2025
A NZ anthropologist is out to ensure human remains held by museums and medical schools are better respected.
The call of home is strong. But not everyone makes it. The remains of thousands of people, illegally and unethically collected as part of the historic bone trade, are still held in museums and universities around the world.
Working out who these individuals were, where they came from and how to get them home is a colossal job.
As part of that, Dunedin biological anthropologist Professor Siân Halcrow is about to head to Durham University in the UK to begin a more than $2 million, four-year research programme she aptly calls “Skeletons in the Closet”.
The first New Zealander to be awarded a British Academy global professorship, she will be researching the bioethics of anatomical skeletal collections in British museums and universities, looking at where these human remains came from, how they have been used and how they might best be treated or repatriated.
Halcrow, of the University of Otago's Department of Anatomy, is aware how sensitive and challenging her work is. She has carried out similar research at universities and museums in the United States and, much closer to home, at Otago Medical School's WD Trotter Anatomy Museum, the largest collection of its kind in the Southern Hemisphere. Founded in 1875, the medical school had close early ties with Britain, with professors of anatomy trained in Edinburgh and the Royal College of Surgeons of England, she says. “We found evidence [in the museum] of the commodification and dehumanising of bodies sold from India, along with others bought from unknown sources overseas, or from marginalised local women.
“This made me want to extend investigations to Britain, to tackle the intersecting colonial legacies in skeletal acquisition and curation in Britain and its colonies.”
このストーリーは、New Zealand Listener の September 20-26, 2025 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
New Zealand Listener からのその他のストーリー
New Zealand Listener
Cut off in infancy
A new way of delivering health services would have benefited Pākehā as well as Māori.
8 mins
December 13-19, 2025
New Zealand Listener
Take a dive
The ethics of the mosh pit allow for a safe place to get down and physical.
2 mins
December 13-19, 2025
New Zealand Listener
Law flip-flops bad for all
If people are expected to know the law, they must be sure that the law is certain and predictable. That way, individuals and businesses can organise their affairs with confidence.
2 mins
December 13-19, 2025
New Zealand Listener
Let it blow
Startlingly original tale of a wind in Cumbria and its power over the people.
3 mins
December 13-19, 2025
New Zealand Listener
The old and the destitute
Once you start looking for them in Berlin, you realise how many there actually are: older people who rummage around in public trash looking for plastic or glass bottles. If the bottle has a recycling symbol printed on it, you can get anything from 5-25 eurocents when you return it to the grocery store.
2 mins
December 13-19, 2025
New Zealand Listener
Getting into the groove
Morag Atchison swings from choral work to a tango-based mass that might get her dancing.
2 mins
December 13-19, 2025
New Zealand Listener
Goering's last stand
Crowe steals the show in war crimes drama
2 mins
December 13-19, 2025
New Zealand Listener
Gagging for it
The search for the worst recipe of all times is over. The people have spoken.
8 mins
December 13-19, 2025
New Zealand Listener
Shelf life
In the teeth of a cost-of-living crisis, Kiwi consumers are back to buying Kiwi books
3 mins
December 13-19, 2025
New Zealand Listener
Musk's wiki hallucinations
My Wikipedia entry began as a joke. Eighteen years ago, a friend created an article that consisted of a couple of lines about the work I did at the time and several other in-jokes. Another editor mercifully removed the joke lines a couple of weeks later, and then some more silliness a week after that. But in the process, a new “fact” about me became enshrined.
2 mins
December 13-19, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
