Archaeology of the Dreamtime: The story of prehistoric Australia and its people (original) (raw)
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Archaeology from Australia, 2004
Archaeology from Australia is a snapshot of archaeological research in Australia at the beginning of the 21st century. This book brings together authors from across Australia in all areas of historic and prehistoric archaeology. Not only does it capture work being done in Australia but it also embraces the neighbouring arenas in the South Pacific, Melanesia and South East Asia as well as wide-ranging research further afield. As President of the Australian Archaeological Association (AAA), I find that this book provides an excellent overview of what are considered to be many of the important contemporary areas of Australian archaeological research. The Australian Archaeological Association is one of the largest archaeological organisations in Australia, with a diverse membership of professionals, students and others with an interest in archaeology. It represents the discipline of mainstream archaeology and, in its broadest sense, acts as a framework within which people can network, communicate and share ideas, expertise and experience. 1 In recent years, AAA has been a forum for debate and discourse on such topics as the interface between archaeological research and the traditional custodians of the land and the ethical dimensions of archaeology. The annual conference and the journal of the association (Australian Archaeology) together provide important forums for the exchange of ideas and the showcasing of current research. Importantly, Archaeology from Australia is a book that provides a bridge between the discipline and non-specialist audience. In an era where effective and clear communication is of paramount importance, this book fills a niche illustrating the diverse approaches and problems that combine under the umbrella called archaeology.
An Archaeology of Australia Since 1788
Contributions To Global Historical Archaeology, 2011
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The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Indigenous Australia and New Guinea, 2021
Most histories of Australian archaeology written in the past three decades imagine that the discipline came of age in (approximately) the year 1960. We are led to believe that systematic archaeological research, nuanced interpretations, and advocacy for the conservation of Aboriginal cultural heritage all date to the post-1960 era. Yet archaeological research in Australia has a lengthier and more complex genealogy. Here we use a series of case studies to explore the gradual development of the discipline during the twentieth century. We unpack key moments and projects during the early-to-mid twentieth century and examine the extent to which the so-called "professional" archaeologists of the 1960s overlapped with and depended upon the work of "amateur" scholars. We conclude by suggesting that the period of most rapid and significant change in archaeological thought and practice was precipitated by Aboriginal activism in the 1980s. Australia's First Peoples demanded control of research into their cultural heritage, a project which is ongoing today. Our discipline must encourage a culture of reflexivity on its current practices by coming to terms with rather than silencing its history (whether good, bad, or ugly).
2008
Terra Australis reports the results of archaeological and related research within the south and east of Asia, though mainly Australia, New Guinea and island Melanesia-lands that remained terra australis incognita to generations of prehistorians. Its subject is the settlement of the diverse environments in this isolated quarter of the globe by peoples who have maintained their discrete and traditional ways of life into the recent recorded or remembered past and at times into the observable present.