Interdisciplinarity and Archaeology: A Review of the 2022 ARCHON Day. Rijksdienst voor het Cultureel Erfgoed, Amersfoort. October 28, 2022. (original) (raw)

On Interdisciplinarity and Historical Archaeology (Routledge 2020)

The Routledge Handbook of Global Historical Archaeology, 2020

This review assesses some of the more recent contours of interdisciplinarity within the historical archaeology of the modern world. Three areas with unique integrative capabilities are assessed: i) archaeologies of landscape, space and place; ii) archaeologies of the contemporary past; and iii) archaeologies of science and historic materials. At its strongest, historical archaeology demonstrates an eclectic engagement with theories and methods developed elsewhere, setting the groundwork for interdisciplinary and even transdisciplinary futures. However, if one argues that interdisciplinarity requires a more reflexive sense of engagement with non-archaeological modes of enquiry, our discipline still has room for improvement.

Interdisciplinary Contentions in Archaeology: An Introduction

Forum Kritische Archäologie, 2022

It is rare to engage with archaeology nowadays without stumbling upon references to inter-, multi-, cross-, and transdisciplinary research. It seems that any archaeological project that wishes to be successful must engage somehow with disciplines other than archaeology. However, a closer look into interdisciplinary archaeology and its cognates is not as straightforward as it first appears. The aim of this introduction is to outline the context of interdisciplinarity in archaeology and introduce the several topics discussed in the papers composing this current theme issue.

25th Annual Meeting of the European Association of Archaeologists Beyond paradigms

2019

Themes of the Annual Meeting The Annual Meeting themes, as defined by the Scientific Committee, incorporate the diversity of EAA and the multidimensionality of archaeological practice, including archaeological interpretation, heritage management and politics of the past and present. 1. Archaeological theory and methods beyond paradigms 2. Interpreting the archaeological record: artefacts, humans, and landscapes 3. Archaeology of mountainous landscapes 4. Digital archaeology, science and multidisciplinarity: new methods, new challenges 5. Archaeological heritage and museum management: future chances, future risks 6. Global change and archaeology

eDAI Research Paper 2019-3 Potential and prospects of research at the German Archaeological Institute

e-Forschungsberichte des Deutschen Archäologischen Instituts, 2019

With the establishment of the Instituto di corrispondenza archeologica in Rome in 1829, the foundation stone was laid for the German Archaeological Institute. The 190th anniversary celebration in 2019 was an opportunity for a discussion about shared research perspectives for the Institute‘s departments and commissions. The drafting of the research programmes and their review by the scientific committees of the various departments and commissions was accompanied in the board of directors by a discussion process focused on shared research objectives and future prospects. This discussion additionally served to determine the Institute‘s own position in the context of debates – taking place within various disciplines as well as beyond their boundaries – about the content, methods and tasks of archaeology in the 21st century. This document outlines basic principles as an aid for the development of collaborative research formats at the DAI and to further discuss and refine its research agendas and the vision of the future they contain.