Archaeology and the senses : human experience, memory, and affect

書誌事項

Archaeology and the senses : human experience, memory, and affect

Yannis Hamilakis

Cambridge University Press, 2013

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注記

Includes bibliographical references (p. 209-237) and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

This book is an exciting new look at how archaeology has dealt with the bodily senses and offers an argument for how the discipline can offer a richer glimpse into the human sensory experience. Yannis Hamilakis shows how, despite its intensely physical engagement with the material traces of the past, archaeology has mostly neglected multi-sensory experience, instead prioritising isolated vision and relying on the Western hierarchy of the five senses. In place of this limited view of experience, Hamilakis proposes a sensorial archaeology that can unearth the lost, suppressed, and forgotten sensory and affective modalities of humans. Using Bronze Age Crete as a case study, Hamilakis shows how sensorial memory can help us rethink questions ranging from the production of ancestral heritage to large-scale social change, and the cultural significance of monuments. Hamilakis points the way to reconstituting archaeology as a sensorial and affective multi-temporal practice.

目次

  • 1. Demolishing the museum of sensory ab/sense
  • 2. Archaeology, modernity, and the senses
  • 3. Recapturing sensorial and affective experience
  • 4. Senses, materiality, time: a new ontology
  • 5. Sensorial necro-politics: the mortuary mnemoscapes of Bronze Age Crete
  • 6. Why 'palaces'? Senses, memory, and the 'palatial' phenomenon in Bronze Age Crete
  • 7. From corporeality to sensoriality, from things to flows.

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