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A Future for Archaeology Robert Layton

A Future for Archaeology par Robert Layton

A Future for Archaeology Robert Layton


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Résumé

Highlights the issues of culture, identity and meaning that have moved out of the academic sphere to become central to politics and society from the local to the global. This book shows how archeology has been at the forefront of these mobes towards the non-academic world.

A Future for Archaeology Résumé

A Future for Archaeology Robert Layton

Over the last thirty years issues of culture, identity and meaning have moved out of the academic sphere to become central to politics and society at all levels from the local to the global. Archaeology has been at the forefront of these moves towards a greater engagement with the non-academic world, often in an extremely practical and direct way, for example in the disputes about the repatriation of human burials.

Such disputes have been central to the recognition that previously marginalised groups have rights in their own past which are important for their future. The essays in this book look back at some of the most important events where a role for an archaeology concerned with the past in the present first emerged and look forward to the practical and theoretical issues now central to a socially engaged discipline and shaping its future.

This book is published in honour of Professor Peter Ucko, who has played an unparalleled role in promoting awareness of the core issues in this volume among archaeologists.

À propos de Robert Layton

Robert Layton is Professor of Anthropology at the University of Durham. His previous books include Who Needs the Past? Indigenous values and archaeology, Conflict in the Archaeology of Living Traditions (edited; both Unwin 1989; Routledge 1994), An introduction to theory in anthropology (CUP 1997), Anthropology and history in Franche-Comt; a critique of social theory (OUP, 2000), and Order and anarchy: civil society, social disorder and war (CUP, in press). His research interests include indigenous rights and the evolution of social order. Stephen Shennan is Deputy Director of the Institute of Archaeology, UCL, and Director of the AHRC Centre for the Evolutionary Analysis of Cultural Behaviour. His previous books include The Evolution of Cultural Diversity: A Phylogenetic Approach (edited with Ruth Mace and Clare Holden; UCL Press 2005), Genes, Memes and Human History: Darwinian Archaeology and Cultural Evolution (Thames and Hudson 2002), Quantifying Archaeology (Edinburgh University Press 1997), and The Archaeology of Human Ancestry: Power, Sex and Tradition (edited with James Steele, Routledge 1996). His current interests focus on the application of ideas from evolutionary biology to the understanding of cultural and social change in the past. Peter Stone is Director of the International Centre for Cultural and Heritage Studies at the University of Newcastle and Honorary Chief Executive Officer of the World Archaeological Congress. He teaches heritage management, tourism, media, education and interpretation and has worked internationally as a consultant in these areas. His previous books include Education and the Historic Environment (co-edited with D. Henson and M. Corbishley, Routledge 2004), The Destruction and Conservation of The Cultural Heritage (co-edited with R Layton and J Thomas, Routledge 2001), and The Constructed Past: Experimental Archaeology, Tourism and Education (co-edited with P Planel, Routledge 1999). His current interests focus on the differing drivers for heritage protection and management and the implications these have for interpretation of the past.

Sommaire

Foreword; T.Shaw Introduction; R.Layton, S.Shennan P.Stone 1 Peter Ucko's 'Humane Archaeology'; J.Golson 2 Repositioning Anthropology, 1972--1980; N.Peterson 3 Eaglehawk and Crow; C.Tatz J.Lambert 4 Peter Ucko and the World Archaeological Congress; M.Day 5 Archaeological Overthrows: The 1980s Seen through the Rear Window; N.Ascherson 6 'All Smoke and Mirrors...': The World Archaeological Congress, 1986--2004; P.Stone 7 The World Heritage Convention: Management By and For Whom?; H.Cleere 8 Public Archaeology in the 21st Century; T.Schadla-Hall 9 Indigenous Human Remains and Changing Museum Ideology; C.Fforde J.Hubert 10 The Man Who Would be Moses; B.Butler M.Rowlands 11 'They Made It a Living Thing Didn't They...': The Growth of Things and the Fossilization of Heritage; S.Jones 12 The Archaeology of Local Myths and Heritage Tourism: The Case of Cane River's Melrose Plantation; K.C.MacDonald et al 13 Practising Archaeology in Eastern and Southern Africa: Coming of Age, or The Indigenisation of a Foreign Subject; G.Abungu 14 Central European Archaeology at the Cross-roads; A.Marciniak 15 Theoretical and Ethical Issues of Archaeology in South America; G.Politis 16 The Idea of Prehistory in the Middle East; D.Wengrow 17 Figurines in Action: Methods and Theories in Figurine Research; P.F.Biehl 18 Objects of the Past: Refocusing Archaeology; F.Hassan 19 The Multidisciplinary Study of Agricultural Origins: 'One World Archaeology' in Practice?; D.Harris

Informations supplémentaires

GOR013401441
9781844721269
1844721264
A Future for Archaeology Robert Layton
Occasion - Très bon état
Relié
Taylor & Francis Ltd
20060109
272
N/A
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