Living well without evidence; E & W in Britain.doc (original) (raw)
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Archaeology is the study of human past through material remains and evidences that are left behind by humans, ranging from grand palaces, temples to the small discarded objects of day to day human activity such as pieces of broken pottery. Archaeology adds values to the inanimate objects of the past and helps to understand the histories of the prehistoric times with no written evidences,the protohistoric periods with elusive writings as well as complements the literary evidences from the historic periods, and throws light into the instances were the literary evidences tend to overlook.
Despite its great and growing popularity it seems to me that archaeology is still a widely misunderstood subject (not least by some of its friends, and even of its practitioners), and as a result of this it is still far from having achieved the place, either in formal education or in the general consciousness of society, to which its achievements, and its relevance to our human condition, entitle it. (Evans 1975).
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Antiquity—the past—has been fundamental to archaeology from the very beginnings of the discipline, and it remains the central concept around which archaeological research is developed. Over the years, however, alternative ways of doing and thinking archaeology have come forth to challenge this orientation on the past. Despite their growth in scope and sophistication, these alternatives remain at the margins of our community. In this article, the authors argue that it is in the best interests of archaeology—both as a community and as a discipline—to not brush aside these alternatives but rather to afford them serious attention.
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This paper offers a survey of the rapid changes observed in the field of archaeological theory in the last twenty years or so; in the midst of cataclysmic changes in the way scholars, and the public at large, attempt to comprehend the past, archaeologists have learnt to trust significantly less their valuable raw data and ‘facts’, in favour of more nuanced accounts allowing for the complexity of the phenomena they study. More to the point, they slowly realise that, as historians, they are internal to the problems under their scrutiny.
Historical Archaeology in Britain
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