Authors
Williams, HowardAffiliation
University of ChesterPublication Date
2022-12-23
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The popularity of the Vikings remains a mixed blessing for archaeologists and heritage practitioners; they are ‘victims of their own success’ on multiple registers (Croix 2015). This is all the more so because, over the last decade at least, we have been unquestionably living through a global ‘Viking revival’ (Birkett 2019:4). Today, Vikings are a focus of identity, faith, politics, consumerism and escapism in which archaeological sources are drawn upon in rich and complex fashions. I have three critical points to make which aim to support and extend, not detract from or devalue, Sindbæk’s insights and inferences: ‘where’s the evidence?’; ‘what’s the context?’; ‘what do we do about it?’ These points together lead me to propose we must collectively adopt a refreshed and reinvigorated agenda to pursue dedicated and sustained ‘Public Viking Research’ into today’s Vikingisms in museums and elsewhere.Citation
Williams, H. (2022). Public Viking Research in museums and beyond. Current Swedish Archaeology, 30, 25–34. https://doi.org/10.37718/CSA.2022.02Publisher
Swedish Archaeological SocietyJournal
Current Swedish ArchaeologyAdditional Links
https://publicera.kb.se/csa/article/view/6760Type
ArticleISSN
1102-7355EISSN
2002-3901ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.37718/CSA.2022.02
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