Results 311 to 320 of about 4,896,976 (362)
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Rewriting History, 2019
Unlike other academic disciplines, archaeology has always involved a public dimension, and from its origins in antiquarian curiosity to ‘citizen science’ and ‘crowdfunding’ of modern research archaeologists have generally acknowledged their obligation to
Deanne T. Pickford
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Unlike other academic disciplines, archaeology has always involved a public dimension, and from its origins in antiquarian curiosity to ‘citizen science’ and ‘crowdfunding’ of modern research archaeologists have generally acknowledged their obligation to
Deanne T. Pickford
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Archaeology, Indigenous erasure, and the creation of white public space at the California missions
Journal of Social Archaeology, 2022This paper explores how the materiality of the past has been mobilized to simultaneously erase Indigenous presence and create white public space at Spanish mission sites in California.
Lee M. Panich
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Antiquity, 2000
The term ‘public archaeology’ can mean many things. It can be as simple as a photocopied brochure left outside a fenced-off archaeological excavation or as complex as an elaborate series of educational programmes. For the purposes of this paper, the term ‘public archaeology’ is used to describe those projects and programmes designed to enhance popular ...
Joanne Lea, Karolyn E. Smardz
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The term ‘public archaeology’ can mean many things. It can be as simple as a photocopied brochure left outside a fenced-off archaeological excavation or as complex as an elaborate series of educational programmes. For the purposes of this paper, the term ‘public archaeology’ is used to describe those projects and programmes designed to enhance popular ...
Joanne Lea, Karolyn E. Smardz
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Notices of Archaeological Publications
Archaeological Journal, 1915(1942). Notices of Archaeological Publications. Archaeological Journal: Vol. 99, No. 1, pp. 129-136.
J. Grahame+4 more
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, 2016
Within the broader debate to (re)define public archaeology, Grima's (2016) paper calls for an archaeology embedded in public archaeology, thereby focusing on this avenue of expansion instead of its own development as a singular discipline.
Jaime Almansa Sánchez
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Within the broader debate to (re)define public archaeology, Grima's (2016) paper calls for an archaeology embedded in public archaeology, thereby focusing on this avenue of expansion instead of its own development as a singular discipline.
Jaime Almansa Sánchez
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Maroon Archaeology Is Public Archaeology
Archaeologies, 2010Researchers of the contemporary past have sought to be instrumental in public dialogue about how artifacts speak to heritage matters relevant to living communities and decision-making polities (Emberling and Hanson, Catastophe!: the looting and destruction of Iraq’s past, 2008; Gibbon, Who owns the past?: cultural policy, cultural property, and the law,
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The Many Publics for Archaeology
American Antiquity, 1991Throughout the world, public agencies, professional societies, and individual archaeologists have recognized the need for more and better public education about archaeology. We are challenged to act on this recognition by providing opportunities for the public to learn about, and even participate in, archaeological interpretations and investigations ...
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On the public appeal of archaeology
Antiquity, 1987Although ‘archaeology and the public’ is very much a matter of current concern, there is still very little actual information about what – if anything – the ‘public’ out there actually thinks of archaeology. The public of Kingston on Hull have been asked.
R.T. Schadla-Hall, David R. Prince
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2021
This chapter explores the various dimensions of the professional life of an Archaeological Survey of India’s Superintendent of Archaeology ranging from conserving monuments to undertaking field work, from dealing with antiquities in the field to engaging with village and city folk, bureaucrats and politicians.
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This chapter explores the various dimensions of the professional life of an Archaeological Survey of India’s Superintendent of Archaeology ranging from conserving monuments to undertaking field work, from dealing with antiquities in the field to engaging with village and city folk, bureaucrats and politicians.
openaire +1 more source