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2024, Australian Archaeology
https://doi.org/10.1080/03122417.2024.2317553…
4 pages
1 file
Country goes to the heart of First Nations Australians' identity and spiritual connection to ancestral lands. It is much more than a geographical place, it is spiritually alive, animate, and sentient (Bradley with Yanyuwa Families 2022; Rose 1996). Being 'on-Country', a phrase often said by First Nations Australians, is about spiritual connection, vitalism, and regeneration, and acknowledging the spiritual agency, intentionality, and sentience of place. It's also about acknowledging and feeling the place, presence, and agency of the Old People, the Ancestors, and understanding and taking on the ancestrally ordained responsibility to what is referred to formally as 'Caring for Country'. People look after Country and Country looks after people because of consubstantiation; that is, they are coconstituted as kin. Country is family. Every leaf, animal, grain of sand is Country; there are no 'culturally sterile' sediments at the base of excavations as archaeologists are so fond of saying. The Old People watch over current generations and must be engaged and given respect when out-andabout on-Country, especially when activities on-Country concern cultural activities, including archaeology. Country itself thus engages with people and has a morality that ensures that inappropriate cultural practices and transgressions of cultural law can result in punishment expressed in myriad ways, including bad luck and sickness. Although Country is integral to religious tenets of the Dreaming and associated songlines and Law, it is equally about philosophy, ontology, and epistemology. Respect for the Old People, Country, and cultural protocol are major concerns for First Nations people when they work with archaeologists. As archaeologists we are trained to enter the field with myriad thoughts in our heads about where and how to survey and record sites, and in the case of excavations, where best to place pits, sieving stations, and so on.
2014
Archaeology is not merely the study of antiquity through the systematic discovery, colleting and documenting of ancient things. It is also the appreciation and interpretation of things and their agency which shed light on the character and dynamics of past (and present) societies.
The paper argues the case that, while archaeological practice involves the application of multiple methods and techniques, excavation is historically rooted as the core method of the discipline, conditioning all the others. Excavation is to archaeology as ethnography is to social anthropology. It is not only a principal ground of archaeological knowledge production. In a fundamental sense, excavation is constitutive of what it is to be an archaeologist.
The Encyclopedia of Archaeological Sciences, 2018
Integral to the practice and identity of archaeology, fieldwork is practical research conducted in the context of a site or a landscape. Throughout the history of the discipline, the primary function of fieldwork was the recovery and collection of data for off‐site analysis and interpretation. The relationship between fieldwork and analysis has grown in its complexity and detail, and the merits of innovations in methodological creativity and experimentation contribute significantly to the depth of archaeological narratives. More recent philosophical contributions focus on the relationship of theory to practice, and argue that interpretation is something carried out during, not after, fieldwork. They also highlight that fieldwork is materially constituted, which, in addition to the sociopolitical context through which fieldwork is conducted, may in different ways contribute to the identification of archaeological data as well as define the social value of archaeology more generally.
Routledge, 2005
A fine summary of state-of-the-art thinking in archaeology in its time (2005), and still very relevant in 2020. I contributed a couple of entries. This invaluable resource provides an up-to-date and comprehensive survey of key ideas in archaeology and their impact on archaeological thinking and method. Featuring over fifty detailed entries by international experts, the book offers definitions of key terms, explaining their origin and development. Entries also feature guides to further reading and extensive cross-referencing. Subjects covered include: • Thinking about landscape • Cultural evolution • Social archaeology • Gender archaeology • Experimental archaeology • Archaeology of cult and religion • Concepts of time • The Antiquity of Man • Feminist archaeology • Multiregional evolution Archaeology: The Key Concepts is the ideal reference guide for students, teachers and anyone with an interest in archaeology.
What are the secrets to successful archaeology in Australia? What traps are there for the novice archaeologist? How can a hill be a sacred site? Who holds the best repositories of historical documents? What skills and qualities do archaeological consultancy firms look for? What is it that everyone else knows that you don't? This book contains the answers to these questions, and more. Whether you are a graduate student seeking to gain overseas experience, a volunteer wanting to learn more about archaeology by working on a real site, or a professional archaeologist interested in gaining employment, this volume provides a unique introduction to undertaking archaeology in an Australian setting. Grounded in the social, political and ethical issues that inform Australian archaeology today, Digging it up Down Under includes advice on the local legislative situation, relevant codes of ethics, definitions of artifacts and sites, and the history and characteristic features of the occupation of the continent by both Aboriginal and European people. Professional archaeologists provide their personal tips for working in each state and territory, dealing with a living heritage, working with Aboriginal peoples, and coping with Australian conditions. This book also includes practical advice on finding funding, local practices, getting published, and having fun-all with the aim of making you better equipped to undertake archaeology in the land down under.
In "Indigenous Heritage and Cultural Tourism: Theories and Practices on Utilizing the Ainu Heritage," edited by Mayumi Okada and Hirofumi Kato, pp. 141-151. , 2014
“Indigenous archaeology” is an alternate means of conducting archaeology. It can be conceived of as a response to traditional Western scientific approaches andthe impact of colonialism in archaeology, as well as to the interests and needs of Indigenous peoples themselves. Indigenous archaeology reflects a broadening and restructuring of existing theory and practice, to make the discipline more relevant and satisfying to descendant communities. As a discipline, Indigenous archaeology examines issues relating to identity and ethnicity, the nature of knowledge, the flow of benefits derived from archaeological research, the indivisibility of tangible and intangible heritage, and different ways of knowing the world. Depending upon who is involved and in what context, Indigenous archaeology may be as much about the recovery of objects and information about past lifeways as it is about the sociopolitics of archaeology. It can also be as much about community involvement as it is about the decisions and choices of the people involved. As such, it is very much a multifaceted and reflexive endeavor in which Indigenous epistemologies intersect with archaeological practice in sometimes controversial, frequently challenging, but always enlightening ways. ...
Antiquity, 2019
Current archaeological practice in the UK and elsewhere focuses on the collection of empirical data. While scholars have proposed theoretical advances in field techniques, very few of these methods have been adopted in commercial archaeology. A combination of increased time pressure on development projects and the conservatism of the sector contribute to challenging times for archaeological practice. Additional complexity is introduced by large-scale infrastructure projects unsuited to standardised field techniques. This article explores these issues, calling for a flexible, consultative approach to project design and implementation, to ensure the longevity of both archaeology and the archaeological profession.
Routledge, 2013
This book is intended to change the way we understand archaeology, the way it works, and its recent history. Offered are seventeen conversations among some of its notable contemporary figures, edited and with a commentary. They reveal an understanding of archaeology that runs counter to most text book accounts, delving deeply into the questions that have come to fascinate archaeologists over the last forty years or so, those that concern major events in human history such as the origins of agriculture and the state, and questions about the way archaeologists go about their work. Many of the conversations highlight quite intensely held personal insight into what motivates us to pursue archaeology, what makes archaeologists tick; some may even be termed outrageous in the light they shed on the way archaeological institutions operate – excavation teams, professional associations, university departments. Something of an oral history, this is a finely focused study of a creative science, a collection of bold statements that reveal the human face of archaeology in our contemporary interest in the material remains of the past.
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