When Defense Is Not Enough: On Things, Archaeological Theory, and the Politics of Misrepresentation
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/24256Dato
2021-08-19Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
This article responds to a growing tide of critique targeting select new materialist and object-oriented approaches in archaeology. Here we take a stand against this critical discourse not so much to counter actual and legitimate differences in how we conceive of archaeology and its role, but to target the exaggerations, excesses, and errors by which it increasingly is articulated and which restrict communication to the impoverishment of the field as whole. While also embracing an opportunity to clarify matters of politics and archaeological theory in light of object-oriented approaches and the material turn at large, we address a number of concerns raised by this critical discourse, which are, we contend, of relevance to all archaeologists: 1) the importance of ontology; 2) working with theory; 3) politics as first philosophy; 4) the concept of the subaltern; 5) binaries and the rhetorical desire for an enemy; and 6) the matter of misrepresentation.
Sitering
Olsen B.J., Witmore C. When Defense Is Not Enough: On Things, Archaeological Theory, and the Politics of Misrepresentation. Forum Kritische Archäologie. 2021;10:67-88Metadata
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