Archaeologists are probably the whitest people I know. Last week I mention the Profiling the Profession report came out and that I would be going into more in-depth analyzes of the results over the next couple of weeks, maybe months. To start that off is this chart-
The problem it highlights is not a new one, all of the previous Profiling the Profession reports highlight the exact same issue, archaeology is not a diverse place to be. To be fair the UK is not a very diverse place with 86% of the population of England and Wales being White. Though talk to any British person and they will swear non-white ethnic groups are much much higher than that . This is not the whole of the UK as Scotland has not released it’s numbers yet which might knock the whites up slightly. Still, other ethnicities are under represented in archaeology even when looking at the UK general population.
It should also be noted that this problem is not unique to the UK. The American Archaeologists report found a similar pattern among North American Archaeologists. I have joked with Bill, at Succinct Research, that his meetings of the Society of Black Archaeologists should be renamed the meetings of the blessing. For those not aware a group of unicorns is called a blessing.
I have been thinking a lot about ethnicity and archaeology recently because Don has proposed a session at TAG on Archaeology and Audiences:
Researching audiences in archaeology: theory, methods and evidence
As archaeologists, we develop interpretations of the past for various audiences, including the so called ‘general public’. This public is however multi-faceted. How far have we gone in understanding their composition, motivations for and ways of engaging (or not) with archaeology?
This session will explore how we can go about researching our audiences, as well as looking at what we might find. We welcome papers from all areas of archaeological interpretation and research, covering heritage sites, online archaeology, audio-visual programming on radio and television, and digital media applications.
Public archaeology is in strong need of reflexivity and an evidence base to characterise ‘the public’ for archaeology. This session aims to bring together existing and ongoing research on this topic to inform future public engagement practice. Issues we might explore could include: theory and methods for researching audiences, the socio-demographic profile of different ‘publics’, drivers and barriers to engagement, conflict between audience desires and archaeological objectives, the evaluation of the public appeal of archaeology on screen media, the role played by gender, authority and disciplinary boundaries in determining the success of presentations of the past.
As a profession we are not very diverse, as PP shows, and our audiences are not very diverse either, they tend to be middle class, older, and white. All facts well trodden by others before me. However, this session has gotten me thinking about archaeology and how its audiences are disproportionately white. Some of my recent work experiences have got me thinking that a solution to the problem, at least for audiences, might be deceptively simple and the problem infinitely more complex that previously given credit.
A Tale of Two Digs
I recently ran, or helped run, two different digs in Haddington, Scotland. One was at Amisfield Walled Garden and the other was at Nungate Bridge. These were Open Archaeology digs which meant that anyone walking by could, and were heavily encouraged to get involved. However, the audiences were completely different and I think this has to do with location. Amisfield is on the outskirts of town behind a golf course and surrounded by tree. Moreover, it is a walled garden which means it is surrounded by four very tall walls and has one very small entry. It is possible to walk to the location but most people need to travel by car and know that it is there (see map).
The Nungate dig on the other hand is located relative close to the middle of town and was next to the Nungate bridge (see map), one of the only pedestrian pathways over the river. Anyone living in the Nungate area and traveling to almost anywhere else in Haddington had to pass our dig.
Our audiences were strikingly different at these two digs, run in both the same manner and both looking at historical archaeology. Of course there were the local school groups we brought out to the digs which were the same but Amisfield had the same general audience of people interested in the archaeology as most digs e.g. older, white, middle class, etc. Nungate on the other hand had a much more diverse audience from the local addicts to an Indian family (all the more amazing when you consider Haddington is whiter than archaeology) .
There was no difference in how we ran the excavations or what we dug, both historic 18th and 18th century stuff, but location, urban vs. semi-urban/semi-rural. This got me thinking about my other experiences with archaeology and where people are able to interact with archaeology. Most community digs, except for several very notable ones, tend to be located outside of urban centers. Understandable, as you really can’t afford to knock down a building to see what is underneath on a community dig budget. This leave mainly commercial archaeology that takes place in urban settings which of course means construction sites and limited opportunities for anyone outside of the employees to get involved.
Urban and rural locations can have profound effects on access. For one, many people living in highly urbanized areas tend to use public transport. This means that unless public transport reaches a location most people in urban areas can not access it. This was dramatic for our digs. At Amisfield we had one of the kids enjoy his school visit so much that he got his parents out on the weekends. However, it was one kid as opposed to Nungate were we had dozens of children stop by after school and on the weekends. This was because they could walk to the site and they did not need their parents there either. We were in view of many of their flats or there was enough community around that parents could let the kids visit confident that their neighbors would watch after them. Not many people are willing to let their kids walk a few miles into woods to visit strangers. As result in Nungate we had lots of children whose parents were either working poor, thus too busy working to bring their kids, or kids whose parents did not care about archaeology but were willing to let them go down the block to have a go.
When one looks at the distribution of ethnic minorities you find that they are clustered in urban areas, specifically high density urban areas. This map of the UK highlights this and this map the the US shows it as well. The US has some exceptions to this in that the rural south tends to have more blacks but the majority of the country’s rural population tends to be white. In other words, archaeology might have a urban vs. rural problem.
This is NOT saying that the urban/rural and ethnicity are not related. In fact, distribution of wealth, education opportunities, and a whole range of other variables are strongly correlated with ethnicity. This means that all of the problems with urban access by association is being placed on ethnic groups. What this could mean is the solution to this problem is one of access and not cultural. That is that there is no cultural taboo or subconscious barriers for minority groups to participate in archaeology. If we simply place our digs in urban areas, which tend to correlate with ethnic minorities and poorer people, instead of our normal places, you know Egypt and in national parks, we can change our audiences. Thus the problem is more complex than the general ‘minorities are just not interested in archaeology’ but the solution is more simple than trying to change cultures.
This can also effect the profession as well. Ask most archaeologists and they will tell you that they got involved in archaeology because either they did it as a kid and were hooked or they tried it in university and were hooked. For the latter reducing the problems of urban access will have very minimal impact as one of the issues with dense urban areas is that they tend not to send too many kids to university. However, if you hook some of them as kids you might end up increasing the diversity of the profession.
I will be the first one to admit this is all based on thin data and anecdotes. There is also the problem of falling into the incredibly bad trap of the easy solution e.g. if we just had more money we could fix problem X. These are more musings and ideas than anything else? I would love to hear anyone else’s thoughts on this? Has anyone else had similar experiences they would like to share? Any research to prove or disprove this? Any comments about how I am flat out wrong … or right? Please do share.
Also, feel free to steal the ideas and conduct your own research/projects. Some day I hope to investigate these musings further but I am not going to hold anyone back. The reason I am putting them up here is so others can run with them.
Kelly M
October 15, 2013
Disclaimer: I only have anecdotal evidence to share with you so bear with me….my comments are not scientific or indicative of anything.
A friend of mine, whose parents had immigrated to Gibraltar from India, told me that a lot of parents of her generation tend to discourage their children from pursuing “economically worthless” degrees and that’s there a certain amount of pressure among her own generation to get excellent grades and go off to university to study medicine, sciences and/or law. A number of them also study for degrees in business & management in order to inherit the family business. Another friend of mine (mainland Chinese) said a similar thing, though in her case she was put off from studying history and persuaded to study computer sciences instead (which was the hot topic in the late 1990s) as her parents wanted her to get a well-paying job. There was a feeling that the older generation were determined to either fulfil their dreams through their children and that the younger generation were obligated to do well in their studies as a way to repay their parents for the sacrifices they made by emigrating from their home countries or spending so much on their childrens’ education.
Could this be partly to blame for the under-representation of ethnic minorities in British archaeology? Is there a similar trend in other arts subjects (e.g. history, Classics)?
Doug Rocks-Macqueen
October 15, 2013
yes- I have heard many times about the generational pressures of migrants.
The only reason I did not consider it was the US has the same distribution of archaeologists but African Americans have been in the country longer than most whites. These are of course very different histories and cultures so it may not be at all applicable. So it could be applicable.
SuccinctBill (@SuccinctBill)
October 15, 2013
Kelly M. may have hit the issue on the head. Access to education is an increasingly important factor in what fields of study members of ethnic groups pursue. I also heard the “go to school, get a good job” adage when I was young from my black grandparents and parents. Fortunately, when I said I was going to go to school to become an archaeologist, my parents simply thought I was going to become a professor, which was considered a “good job.” My family are also of the opinion that working for others should be my principal desire in life. They have been taken aback by my quest to start my own business and carve out a career for myself from unconventional means. Interestingly, Kelly M. describes a few situations where the older generation did not pursue their dreams and have also discouraged their children from pursuing them in order to obtain a well-paying job. That mirrors the advice I received.
I think emphasizing the fact that members of other ethnicities can get a good job doing archaeology is the best way to encourage diversity in the field. This is difficult because it’s hard as hell to make it in archaeology. However, small business associations and government set-asides for women- and minority-owned companies could be a huge way non-whites can carve out a career in archaeology. In the U.S., an African American female company owner that was also a veteran would be almost unstoppable for government contracts, especially if she partnered with the best and brightest in the industry. The proposals from this person could actually include livable wages for her employees because of all the bonus points she’d receive for simply being who she is.
Black people are just as interested in archaeology as whites, but we are reluctant to invest in a career field that is less likely to pay dividends. This idea will probably be shaken up due to the recent recession and government shutdown where even folks with “good jobs” were sent to pasture.
I also think the lack of representation of black people in archaeology actually prevents other black folks from entering the field. How many white people in the U.K. or U.S. would go into a field that is 99% non-white? Especially if you knew your chances of success were tenuous at best? Look at hip-hop music. How many big time white rappers are there? Exactly.
The increase, if you can call it that, in African American archaeologists in the U.S. is probably due to the fact that a few more black people have become archaeology professors. The simple presence of a black archaeology professor is likely to motivate other black people to become archaeologists. I have been unable to convince any other black people to go after a career in archaeology, but I will continue to encourage anyone that has a desire to be an archaeologist to enter the field, especially if they’re black.
Doug Rocks-Macqueen
October 16, 2013
My only hesitation with such an explanation is that get a good job is advice that is given by many parents/grandparents regardless of ethnicity. I am not sure it is unique or more prevalent among different groups.
‘Black people are just as interested in archaeology as whites’
‘The increase, if you can call it that, in African American archaeologists in the U.S. is probably due to the fact that a few more black people have become archaeology professors. The simple presence of a black archaeology professor is likely to motivate other black people to become archaeologists.’
Those are the questions I am most interested in- is there difference in interest, is it cultural? Moreover, is it subconscious? You mention a higher number of black archaeologists increases more participation.
‘I also think the lack of representation of black people in archaeology actually prevents other black folks from entering the field. How many white people in the U.K. or U.S. would go into a field that is 99% non-white?’
This would appear to be a sort of subconscious barrier holding back interaction. Is the problem very hard to deal with in that we need to spend generations building up generation after generation of minorities to increase the rate. Creating a sort of feedback loop. Or is it simply access? If we change how we did archaeology could we greatly alter our audience?
Are only people in the middle class white culture those interested in archaeology? If that was the case we need to turn other groups into “middle class white people” to get them interested. Or is everyone interested in archaeology but as it is currently practiced only MCWP can access it? So if we change the way we operate we change our audience?
My bet is it will be a muddled mess of both- long term cultural changes and need to change how archaeology is practiced.
What are your thoughts Bill? Being one of the 1%ers (if only it was because of money) do you think it changing how archaeology is run would greatly alter participation or would it take a long time?
Shayla
November 11, 2013
I am an African-American graduate student in Anthropological Archaeology. One factor I didn’t see mentioned above is the historically contentious relationship between people of color and anthropologist/archaeologist. There is hostility there in some cases that needs to be addressed. I was working for the National Park Service as an archaeologist and I found myself in conversation with a black Af-Am man at the metro in DC (who asked about my uniform). He was appalled by my career choice because he saw archaeology as a very biased field with a history of distorting the image of Africa and promoting Eurocentric or “cultural evolutionist” values (not his exact words but I’m translating into academic speech). I have been in several places where Af-Americans will tell me (being Af-Am) their true feeling and distrust with the field. THAT, to me, is a major hurdle to diversifying the field.
Paula
November 9, 2015
If you are speaking of co workers, can’t help you there but if you are speaking of ancient peoples, you better look again, the early Irish, Scotts and Brits were black and a mixed people. Read the book The Negro Question by Lee Cummings especially part 3 .You will see what has been hidden and is now coming out on several levels. Beware you will get backlash.
Make sure you take photos of originals before its passed on