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Ethnographies of Archaeological Practice

Cultural Encounters, Material Transformations

Matt Edgeworth
Barcode 9780759108448
Hardback

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Original price £135.55 - Original price £135.55
Original price
£135.55
£135.55 - £135.55
Current price £135.55

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Release Date: 04/05/2006

Genre: History
Label: AltaMira Press
Series: Worlds of Archaeology
Contributors: Matt Edgeworth (Edited by), Jonathan Bateman (Contributions by), Lisa Breglia (Contributions by), John Carman (Contributions by), Oguz Erdur (Contributions by), Denise Maria Cavalcante Gomes (Contributions by), Charles Goodwin (Contributions by), Anders Gustafsson (Contributions by), Cornelius Holtorf (Contributions by), Dirk Jacobs (Contributions by), Hakon Karlsson (Contributions by), Angela McClanahan (Contributions by), David Van Reybrouck (Contributions by), Timoteo Rodriguez (Contributions by), Blythe E. Roveland (Contributions by), Michael Wilmore (Contributions by), Thomas Yarrow (Contributions by)
Language: English
Publisher: AltaMira Press

Cultural Encounters, Material Transformations
Collection of original studies on the contemporary practice of archaeology as a professional and scholarly endeavor.
Ethnographic perspectives are often used by archaeologists to study cultures both past and present - but what happens when the ethnographic gaze is turned back onto archaeological practices themselves? That is the question posed by this book, challenging conventional ideas about the relationship between the subject and the object, the observer and the observed, and the explainers and the explained. This book explores the production of archaeological knowledge from a range of ethnographic perspectives. Fieldwork spans large parts of the world, with sites in Turkey, the Netherlands, Mexico, Brazil, Italy, Germany, the USA and the United Kingdom being covered. They focus on excavation, inscription, heritage management, student training, the employment of hired workers and many other aspects of archaeological practice. These experimental ethnographic studies are situated right on the interface of archaeology and anthropology_on the road to a more holistic study of the present and the past.