Conflict in the archaeology of living traditions

書誌事項

Conflict in the archaeology of living traditions

edited by Robert Layton

(One world archaeology, 8)

Unwin Hyman, 1989

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注記

Papers from the World Archaeological Cingress held in Southampton, England in Sept. 1986

Includes bibliographies and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

This book is one of a series of more than 20 volumes resulting from the World Archaeological Congress, September l986. The series attempts to bring together archaeologists and anthropologists from many parts of the world, as well as academics from contingent disciplines and also non-academics from a wide range of cultural backgrounds. The series addresses world archaeology in its widest sense, investigating how people lived in the past and how and why changes took place, resulting in the forms of society and culture which exist today. In this particular volume, the essays are derived from discussions on the themes of "Material Culture and the Making of the Modern United States: Views from Native America". It presents a series of statements about the complexities of the interpretation of the past, together with case studies which demonstrate, in a wide variety of contexts, the way that particular interactions between "natives" and "Europeans" (in the very recent past as well as in the 16th and 17th centuries) have had diverse consequences. The insensitivity of archaeology's unquestioning assumption that lands are only really "discovered" when Europeans have arrived is explored and concludes that decision making must be in the hands of the social and cultural groups whose ancestors may be disturbed if archaeological investigations are allowed to proceed.

目次

  • Conflict in the archaeology of living traditions, Robert Layton
  • relations of production and exchange in the 17th century New England - interpretative contexts for the archaeology of culture contact, Alan D.Beauregard - Plymouth as a case study, the northern Connecticut River Valley
  • archaeology, colonialism and the 17th century native America - towards an alternative interpretation, Patricia E.Rubertone
  • history and prehistory in Bolivia - what about the Indians?, Carlos Mamami Condori - "Jichhapacha" - the present colonized age, Chukir Qamir Wirnita - savagery and freedom versus civilization and colonial subjugation
  • made radical by my own - an archaeologist learns to accept reburial, Larry J.Zimmerman - the Society for American Archaeology, 1982
  • on the problem of historicist categories in theories of human development, Angela Gilliam
  • the weight of an encumbered inheritance upon the study of the past in Madegascar, Jean-Aime Rakotoarisoa
  • archaeological and anthropological hypotheses concerning the origin of ethnic divisions in sub-Saharan Africa, Pancrace Twagiramutara - Rwanda - a case study
  • the role of language in African perceptions of the past - an appraisal of African language policies and practices, Bongasu Tanla Kishani
  • a chapter in the history of the colonization of the Sami lands - the forced migration of Norwegian reindeer Sami to Finland in the 1800s, Marjut and Pekka Aikio
  • the reconstruction of the Sami village based on research into legal history - Lappekodicill - the Sami Magna Carta
  • a proper place for the dead - a critical review of the "reburial" issue, Jane Hubert - variety of Judeo-Christian attitudes, the reburial issue in the USA and in Australia
  • the sanctity of the grave - white concepts and American Indian burials, Randall H.McGuire - cemetery removal in Broome County
  • the acquisition, storage and handling of aboriginal skeletal remains in museums - an indigenous perspective, Lori Richardson
  • the souls of my dead brothers, Ernest Turner - Chief Seattle's speech
  • statement of American Indians against desecration before the World Archaeological Congress, Jan Hammil and Robert Cruz
  • federal Indian burial policy - historical anachronism or contemporary reality?, Stephen Moore - the Archaeological Resources Protection Act of 1979
  • human bones as symbols of power - aboriginal American belief systems toward bones and "grave-robbing" archaeologists, Larry J.Zimmerman
  • the role of archaeology in nation building, Jo Mangi - what is Papua New Guinea?
  • dual perceptions of the past - archaeology and Inuit culture, Ellen Bielawski.

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