Recurring Dreams: Mega Events and Traces of Past Futures

Investigating several modern ‘mega events’, including World’s Fairs and Olympic Games, this paper discusses the complex relationship such events and their sites have often had with ‘the future’. Such events are frequently associated with demonstrating progress towards future ‘utopias’ (for example ‘...

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Main Author: Jonathan Gardner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UCL Press 2020-01-01
Series:Archaeology International
Online Access:https://www.ai-journal.com/articles/399
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spelling doaj-aa95cc38c341478fa8120f7cd77d7d192021-03-02T10:13:58ZengUCL PressArchaeology International2048-41942020-01-0122110.5334/ai-399374Recurring Dreams: Mega Events and Traces of Past FuturesJonathan Gardner0UCL Institute of Archaeology, London WC1H 0PYInvestigating several modern ‘mega events’, including World’s Fairs and Olympic Games, this paper discusses the complex relationship such events and their sites have often had with ‘the future’. Such events are frequently associated with demonstrating progress towards future ‘utopias’ (for example ‘The World of Tomorrow’ theme of the 1939 World’s Fair in New York) or leaving a tangible positive social and economic ‘legacy’. However, other uses of mega event sites have also frequently manifested darker, more anxious ideas about that which is yet to come. In this paper I discuss three forms in which mega events’ sites relate to the idea of the future: before, during, and after they take place. In discussing these relationships, I demonstrate how traces of ‘past futures’, when investigated archaeologically, provide a diverse means by which to understand how societies have related to the idea of the future through the modern era.https://www.ai-journal.com/articles/399
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jonathan Gardner
spellingShingle Jonathan Gardner
Recurring Dreams: Mega Events and Traces of Past Futures
Archaeology International
author_facet Jonathan Gardner
author_sort Jonathan Gardner
title Recurring Dreams: Mega Events and Traces of Past Futures
title_short Recurring Dreams: Mega Events and Traces of Past Futures
title_full Recurring Dreams: Mega Events and Traces of Past Futures
title_fullStr Recurring Dreams: Mega Events and Traces of Past Futures
title_full_unstemmed Recurring Dreams: Mega Events and Traces of Past Futures
title_sort recurring dreams: mega events and traces of past futures
publisher UCL Press
series Archaeology International
issn 2048-4194
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Investigating several modern ‘mega events’, including World’s Fairs and Olympic Games, this paper discusses the complex relationship such events and their sites have often had with ‘the future’. Such events are frequently associated with demonstrating progress towards future ‘utopias’ (for example ‘The World of Tomorrow’ theme of the 1939 World’s Fair in New York) or leaving a tangible positive social and economic ‘legacy’. However, other uses of mega event sites have also frequently manifested darker, more anxious ideas about that which is yet to come. In this paper I discuss three forms in which mega events’ sites relate to the idea of the future: before, during, and after they take place. In discussing these relationships, I demonstrate how traces of ‘past futures’, when investigated archaeologically, provide a diverse means by which to understand how societies have related to the idea of the future through the modern era.
url https://www.ai-journal.com/articles/399
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