In line with the resurgence of interest in the history of archaeology manifested over the past decade, this volume aims to highlight state-of-the art research across several topics and areas, and to stimulate new approaches and studies in the field. With their shared historiographical commitment, the authors, leading scholars and emerging researchers, draw from a wide range of case studies to address major themes such as historical sources and methods; questions of archaeological practices and the practical aspects of knowledge production; ‘visualizing archaeology’ and the multiple roles of iconography and imagery; and ‘questions of identity’ at local, national and international levels.
Содержание
List of Figures
List of Plates
List of Contributors
Preface and Acknowledgements
Introduction: Archaeology in the Light of its Histories
Nathan Schlanger and Jarl Nordbladh
PART I : SOURCES AND METHODS FOR THE HISTORY OF ARCHAEOLOGY
Chapter 1. Biography as Microhistory: The Relevance of Private Archives for Writing the History of Archaeology
Marc-Antoine Kaeser
Chapter 2. From Distant Shores: Nineteenth-Century Dutch Archaeology in European Perspective
Ruurd B. Halbertsma
Chapter 3. The Hemenway Southwestern Archaeological Expedition, 1886–1889: Model of Inquiry for the History of Archaeology
Curtis M. Hinsley and David R. Wilcox
Chapter 4. The Phenomenon of Pre-Soviet Archaeology. Archival Studies in the History of Russian Archaeology – Methods and Results
Nadezhda I. Platonova
Chapter 5. Prehistoric Archaeology in the ‘Parliament of Science’, 1845–1900
Tim Murray
PART II : ARCHAEOLOGICAL PRACTICE
Chapter 6. Wilamowitz and Stratigraphy in 1873: A Case Study in the History of Archaeology’s ‘Great Divide’
Giovanna Ceserani
Chapter 7. Methodological Reflections on the History of Excavation Techniques
Gisela Eberhardt
Chapter 8. ‘More than a Village’. On the Medieval Countryside as an Archaeological Field of Study
Emma Bentz
Chapter 9. Amateurs and Professionals in Nineteenth-Century Archaeology. The Case of the Oxford ‘Antiquarian and Grocer’ H.M.J. Underhill (1855–1920)
Megan Price
Chapter 10. Revisiting the ‘Invisible College’: José Ramón Mélida in Early Twentieth-Century Spain
Margarita Díaz-Andreu
Chapter 11. Between Sweden and Central Asia. Practising Archaeology in the 1920s and 1930s
Jan Bergman
Chapter 12. Model Excavations: ‘Performance’ and the Three-Dimensional Display of Knowledge
Christopher Evans
PART III : VISUALISING ARCHAEOLOGY
Chapter 13. The Impossible Museum: Exhibitions of Archaeology as Reflections of Contemporary Ideologies
Marcello Barbanera
Chapter 14. Towards a More ‘Scientific’ Archaeological Tool: The Accurate Drawing of Greek Vases between the End of the Nineteenth- and the First Half of the Twentieth-Centuries
Christine Walter
Chapter 15. European Images of the Ancient Near East at the Beginnings of the Twentieth-Century
Maria Gabriella Micale
Chapter 16. Weaving Images. Juan Cabré and Spanish Archaeology in the First Half of the Twentieth-Century
Susana González Reyero
Chapter 17. Frozen in Time: Photography and the Beginnings of Modern Archaeology in the Netherlands
Leo Verhart
PART IV : QUESTIONS OF IDENTITY
Chapter 18. Choosing Ancestors: The Mechanisms of Ethnic A scription in the Age of Patriotic Antiquarianism (1815–1850)
Ulrike Sommer
Chapter 19. Archaeology, Politics and Identity. The Case of the Canary Islands in the Nineteenth-Century
José Farrujia de la Rosa
Chapter 20. The Wagner Brothers: French Archaeologists and Origin Myths in Early Twentieth-Century Argentina
Ana Teresa Martínez, Constanza Taboada and Luis Alejandro Auat
Chapter 21. Language, Nationalism and the Identity of the Archaeologists: The Case of Juhani Rinne’s Professorship in the 1920s
Visa Immonen and Jussi-Pekka Taavitsainen
Chapter 22. Protohistory at the Portuguese Association of Archaeologists: A Question of National Identity?
Ana Cristina Martins
Chapter 23. Making Spain Hispanic. Gómez-Moreno and Iberian Archaeology
Juan P. Bellón, Arturo Ruiz and Alberto Sánchez
Chapter 24. Virchow and Kossinna. From the Science-Based Anthropology of Humankind to the Culture-Historical Archaeology of Peoples
Sebastian Brather
Chapter 25. Dutch Archaeology and National Socialism
Martijn Eickhoff
Index
Об авторе
Jarl Nordbladh retired as Emeritus Professor of Archaeology at Göteborg University. His research interests include the history of archaeology, Scandinavian rock art and scientific illustrations. He has taken part in the EU funded AREA project from its beginnings.