Snatched from northern climes
Greek demands to get back the Elgin marbles risk stopping a better idea: museums lending their treasures
THERE is much to be said for moral clarity. Greece is insisting that the British Museum surrender the marble sculptures that Lord Elgin took down from the Parthenon and carted away in the early 1800s. Anything less, it says, would "condone the snatching of the marbles and the monument's carving-up 207 years ago." The Greek demand for ownership will arouse widespread sympathy, even among those who accept the British Museum's claim to the marbles. With the opening of an impressive new museum in Athens, the sculptures from the Parthenon now have good cause to be reunited, if only for artistic reasons.
But sometimes clarity is self-defeating. A previous Greek administration was willing to finesse the question of ownership and co-operate with the British Museum over a joint display of the marbles. By hardening its position, the Greek government risks driving museums everywhere into clinging to their possessions for fear of losing them. If the aim is for the greatest number of people to see the greatest number of treasures, a better way must be found.
As curators all over the world will see it, those who call for the permanent return of the Parthenon sculptures from London are arguing for international museums to be emptied.
Many other collections have a more dubious provenance than the marbles — think of the British Museum's Benin bronzes, seized in a punitive raid in Nigeria; of the Pergamon altar removed from Turkey and now in Berlin; of Chinese treasures carried off during the Boxer rebellion and again during the civil war; of hundreds of works in Russian museums that were snatched from their owners in the Bolshevik revolution.
You cannot go very far in righting those wrongs without entangling the world's museums in a Gordian knot of restitution claims. That is why, in December 2002, 18 of the world's leading directors - from the Louvre to the Hermitage and from the Metropolitan Museum to the Getty Museum - argued for a quid pro quo. The Munich declaration, as it is called, asserts that today's ethical standards cannot be applied to yesterday's acquisitions; but in return it acknowledges that encyclopedic museums have a special duty to put world culture on display.
This has led to a new level of co-operation between museums over training, curating, restoration and loans. Thousands of works are now lent each year between museums on every continent. Who thought that China's Palace Museum and the National Palace Museum in Taiwan would hold a joint show in Taipei, as they plan to in October, reuniting Qing-dynasty works that have been separated ever since they were borne away from Beijing by the retreating Nationalist forces in 1948? The British Museum was not party to the Munich declaration, but it seems to embrace its spirit. During the Olympic Games in China in 2008 it sent the Discobolus, the discus-thrower of Myron, to Shanghai where 5,000 people queued each day to see it. It will soon lend the Rosetta stone, the cornerstone of written language, to Egypt for the opening of the Giza museum. On the day the new Acropolis Museum was opened, the British Museum's director was in Riyadh, to arrange loans for an exhibition on the haj in London in 2011.
The choice is between the free circulation of treasures and a stand-off in which each museum grimly clings to what it claims to own. Instead of grandstanding, the Greek culture minister should call the British Museum's bluff and ask for loan. The nervous British would then have to test the waters by, say, sending to Athens a single piece of the Parthenon frieze. If that piece were to be seized, then so be it. But if on the due date, the Greeks surprised everybody and returned the sculpture, then the lending programme would surely be expanded. By taking small steps, the Greeks may yet encourage the British to make the big leap. ■
The Economist June 27th 2009
10 Answer the following questions.
What issue is under discussion?
What countries are in the thick of things? What countries are also involved in the dispute?
What is the crux of the matter?
What is the historic background of the conflict?
What are possible solutions to the problem?
What gains and losses may those involved experience?
11 Read the text carefully to find a word or phrase that means:
1 to seize or gain ……………………………
2 country or land …………………………….
3 to pardon or overlook …………………………….
4 a place of origin ……………………………
5 to take away using force ………………………………
6 unable to achieve the intended result …………………………………
7 to involve ………………………………….
8 a deadlock ……………………………………
9 relating to punishment …………………………………
10 to make an exploratory or initial approach ………………………..
11 cut into pieces …………………………………….
12 something given in compensation ……………………………………..
13 to get smth by dealing with people in a skillful way ……………………….
- Unit 1 art or entertainment? lead-in
- 1 Discuss the following questions.
- 2 Complete the text using the words and phrases given. A charge on the National cuLture
- 3 Vocabulary Work
- 6 Use the words and phrases which you heard in the listening to complete the sentences below. (The sentences are not connected with text!)
- 7 Speaking points .
- Snatched from northern climes
- 12 Panel discussion
- 13 Read the following text. The Museum Wars
- 14 Answer the following questions and sum up the information provided in the text.
- 15 Vocabulary
- 16 Projects and presentation skills
- If you are curious for the Sample Presentation, this is a very interesting site of Coca Cola Museum http://www.Woccatlanta.Com/
- Part 3
- 17 Read the text, summarize it and render Part 1 into English. The maximum length for the task is 300 words. What parts would you divide the text into?
- Музей: искусство или развлечение?
- 18 Role-play
- Unit 2 global issues lead-in
- 1 Discuss the following questions.
- 2 Complete the text using the words and phrases given. The legacy of the baby boom in australia
- 3 In the text find the information as referring to
- 5 Vocabulary Work
- 6 Summary Writing
- 7 Listening 1
- 8 Speaking
- Part 1
- The other population crisis
- 10 Summarize what each whole paragraph is about and write a paragraph heading and a summarizing sentence for each paragraph.
- 11 Panel discussion
- 12 Read the following text. Unlikely boomtowns?
- 14 Complete the sentences with the underlined words from the text. Suggest synonyms for them or explain them.
- 16 What are the implications of the following sentences. Translate underlined phrases.
- 18 Projects and presentation skills
- Part 3
- 19 Read the following article and render it into English The maximum length for the task is 300 words. Make use of the words form Tasks 13, 14,15. Город для людей
- 20 Role-play
- Unit 3 science approach lead-in
- 2 Complete the text using the words and phrases given.
- Killer blow
- 3 Find the linking words used in the text. Study the way they organize the structure of the text.
- 5 Listening 1
- Part 1
- 7 Read these comments about space exploration and discuss how far you agree with each opinion.
- 8 Read the following text. Exploration through the ages
- 9 Complete the sentences, summing and paraphrasing the information in the text.
- Part 2
- 14 Read the text and complete the tasks that follow it. Science vs. Pseudoscience
- Vocabulary work
- 16 For the words 1-7 find the appropriate definitions a-f.
- 17 Complete the following sentences using words from the above right column.
- 18 Define five factors why pseudoscience may cause problems for the society.
- 19 Summing up - Make a direct comparison: Science vs. Pseudoscience.
- 20 Panel discussion
- Part 3
- 21 Read the text, summarize and render it into English. The maximum length for the task is 300 words. Интернет. Дефрагментация мозга
- 22 Panel discussion