
American Academy Lecture at DAI Tübingen
Art Under Fire: Cultural Destruction as a Weapon of War
In the eighty years since the end of World War II, it has become a principle of both international law and the rules of war that belligerents in armed conflict must avoid attacks on art and monuments. And yet, from Syria to Ukraine, this has been flouted repeatedly. Worse, international efforts to enforce the prohibition tend to evoke Western elites privileging World Heritage Sites above human life. What has been lost in this false choice, argues Hugh Eakin, is the extent to which culture itself has become a central domain of contemporary warfare. If we recognize that assaults on cultural heritage often serve as harbingers of, or surrogates for, atrocities against human populations, we can also see that protecting it can be a potent form of preventing conflict – and brokering peace.
Please register via Art Under Fire: Cultural Destruction as a Weapon of War – DAI
In cooperation with Deutsch-Amerikanisches Institut Tübingen
d.a.i. hall / Karlstr. 3
72072 Tübingen
Please see registration information at the link in event description.
