How to Record Current Events like an Archaeologist
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/22787Date
2021-10-15Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
This article shows how to record current events from an archaeological perspective. With a case study from the COVID-19 pandemic in Norway, we provide accessible tools to document broad spatial and behavioral patterns through material culture as they emerge. Stressing the importance of ethical engagement with contemporary subjects, we adapt archaeological field methods—including geolocation, photography, and three-dimensional modeling—to analyze the changing relationships between materiality and human sociality through the crisis. Integrating data from four contributors, we suggest that this workflow may engage broader publics as anthropological data collectors to describe unexpected social phenomena. Contemporary archaeological perspectives, deployed in rapid response, provide alternative readings on the development of current events. In the presented case, we suggest that local ways of coping with the pandemic may be overshadowed by the materiality of large-scale corporate and state response.
Publisher
Cambrigde University PressCitation
Magnani, Venovcevs, Farstadvoll, Magnani. How to Record Current Events like an Archaeologist. Advances in Archaeological Practice. 2021Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
Copyright 2021 The Author(s)