I have been doing an interesting exercise -- checking back on the gullibility of the media and the coverage of the "Lost Circle" story in February 2021. You will recall that there was a very carefully orchestrated publicity campaign at the time, with the first transmission of the "Lost Circle" TV documentary timed to coincide with the publication of the original Antiquity article. The amount of work that went into this cannot be overstated -- the documentary maker, the broadcaster, the authors of the journal article, the publishers of "Antiquity", the UCL press office and many others must have been in the loop. All were intent upon maximum publicity and maximum impact -- and who cares anyway about the reliability of what is being promoted as one of the stories of the century?
It's all a bit of a fog, with some reliable information out there somewhere, but almost impossible to discern.......
There are many lessons to be learned -- but will they be learned? I have my doubts. For start, archaeologists (and geologists) should not be so obsessed with IMPACT that they rush into print and present half-baked ideas as realities and inadequate field observations as hard evidence. University press offices should be much more careful about the choice of papers given high-level PR treatment. Journal editors should be much more careful about their choice of peer reviewers and about their publication decisions. And the media should be much more circumspect when assessing the press releases coming from certain press offices and when deciding what coverage to give to "spectacular" stories.
There are many lessons to be learned -- but will they be learned? I have my doubts. For start, archaeologists (and geologists) should not be so obsessed with IMPACT that they rush into print and present half-baked ideas as realities and inadequate field observations as hard evidence. University press offices should be much more careful about the choice of papers given high-level PR treatment. Journal editors should be much more careful about their choice of peer reviewers and about their publication decisions. And the media should be much more circumspect when assessing the press releases coming from certain press offices and when deciding what coverage to give to "spectacular" stories.
Will any those involved in this fiasco regret their errors of judgement, or admit that they have been conned, or apologise to their customers or to those who have grant-aided them? I doubt it very much.........
And will the media cover the publication of my new paper in The Holocene journal, published after very tight peer review and claiming that Waun Mawn had nothing whatsoever to do with Stonehenge? I doubt that very much too -- because to cover the story would be to admit to their own gullibility and lack of scrutiny when they published all that tosh about the "Lost Circle" just three years ago.
Very lazy academic examination by the likes of " Antiquity". Very idle attitude from loads of press officers and newspaper editors. Stonehenge seems to be thought to have untouchable "cuddly kitten" status! Good grief.
ReplyDeleteAnything/ anywhere linked to Stonehenge, however indirectly or dubiously, ends up, sadly, obtaining untouchable iconic status! Of course there are always likely to be some (U.S. citizens for example) who, generally speaking, gullibly accept utter tosh lock, stock and barrel.....
ReplyDeleteNot sure I would go with that, Tony. You can't assume that ALL US citizens are gullible -- I know quite a few who are rather intelligent and discerning! But maybe it's the fools who make most noise and who appear on the telly most often....... so from a distance we get rather a false impression.
ReplyDeleteYou misread my comment, Brian. Look again. I said SOME. Perhaps I'd have been more precise if I'd put "...always likely to be some (some U.S. citizens for example).....Thus double emphasis.
ReplyDeleteWriting this on Tuesday June 21st, I am sad to say that "Stonehenge: a Brief History" by himself, Michael Parker Pearson, although, as Brian has said in a separate Post this book may have been published BEFORE MPP has had to take on board the facts that WAUN MAUN is no longer widely considered to be a stone circle, let alone one which somehow was the precursor to the eventual Stonehenge bluestone monument, NEVERTHELESS MPP trundled out the earlier version of what Waun Maun (in his imagination represented), prehistoric megalithic "quarries" and Uncle Tom Cobbled - Together and all.........!!!
ReplyDelete...... May 21st.........
ReplyDelete