New deals for the past: the Cold War, American archaeology, and UNESCO in Egypt and Syria

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Abstract

From the 1930s to the late 1970s, American archaeologists pursued a paired agenda of science and salvage such that their focus on logical positivism converged with US foreign policy towards international technical assistance. River basin salvage archaeology, pioneered in the US by the Tennessee Valley Authority and exported to the Middle East in the 1950s, was a prime example of American Cold War techno-politics that accompanied other international aid and technical assistance programmes. Amphitheaters of archaeology along the Nile and Euphrates were fertile testing grounds for the development of what became known as the ‘New Archaeology’, but also new deals, new science, infrastructure, and agriculture within a Cold War setting, so that monumental heritage and dam projects became flashpoints between American visions for the Middle East and attempts by UNESCO to maintain the spirit of internationalism.

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Luke, C., & Meskell, L. (2023). New deals for the past: the Cold War, American archaeology, and UNESCO in Egypt and Syria. History and Anthropology, 34(2), 194–214. https://doi.org/10.1080/02757206.2020.1830769

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