The final report in this series focuses on the emerging intersections between historical geography, archaeology and the law. Whilst staying attuned to the darkest of geographies emerging from the sub-field, this report turns its attention to the creative and critical ways in which the dead are being used to reveal past lives and worlds that have been destroyed and forgotten. Using soil and the archaeological imagination as a pivot, this report centres on the interweaving themes of fragile environments, resurfacing and legal worlds in order to suggest the emerging possibilities for a hopeful excavation of new historical geographies
Memory can be both a horrifying trauma and an empowering resource. From the Ancient Greeks to Nietzs...
This dissertation explores the contemporary archaeological record of Retiro, a derelict 19th-century...
This editorial reviews recent works of historical geography published in Transactions. It highlights...
The final report in this series focuses on the emerging intersections between historical geography, ...
The second report in this series turns to focus on the trace in relation to life-writing and biograp...
This chapter explains factors that are important for an understanding of how the archaeological reco...
This article reviews the increasingly diverse ways in which geographers are engaging with archives. ...
In the first of three reports outlining the current state of historical geography, I review recently...
This creative/critical paper explores the implications for the postcolonial of what John Wylie calls...
"Writing Remains brings together a wide range of leading archaeologists and literary scholars to exp...
This dissertation suggests alternative ways of thinking about the scales of interpretation in Syro-P...
This paper considers the possibility that as subject or agent, the landscape might have the potentia...
Iron age ruins are often associated with disoccupation and ‘safely-dead’ cultures, and are disconnec...
This article considers what it means to do engaged geohumanities research on a fated landscape. The ...
The PhD reveals the Australian landscape as inspirited with all that has been, and replete with bein...
Memory can be both a horrifying trauma and an empowering resource. From the Ancient Greeks to Nietzs...
This dissertation explores the contemporary archaeological record of Retiro, a derelict 19th-century...
This editorial reviews recent works of historical geography published in Transactions. It highlights...
The final report in this series focuses on the emerging intersections between historical geography, ...
The second report in this series turns to focus on the trace in relation to life-writing and biograp...
This chapter explains factors that are important for an understanding of how the archaeological reco...
This article reviews the increasingly diverse ways in which geographers are engaging with archives. ...
In the first of three reports outlining the current state of historical geography, I review recently...
This creative/critical paper explores the implications for the postcolonial of what John Wylie calls...
"Writing Remains brings together a wide range of leading archaeologists and literary scholars to exp...
This dissertation suggests alternative ways of thinking about the scales of interpretation in Syro-P...
This paper considers the possibility that as subject or agent, the landscape might have the potentia...
Iron age ruins are often associated with disoccupation and ‘safely-dead’ cultures, and are disconnec...
This article considers what it means to do engaged geohumanities research on a fated landscape. The ...
The PhD reveals the Australian landscape as inspirited with all that has been, and replete with bein...
Memory can be both a horrifying trauma and an empowering resource. From the Ancient Greeks to Nietzs...
This dissertation explores the contemporary archaeological record of Retiro, a derelict 19th-century...
This editorial reviews recent works of historical geography published in Transactions. It highlights...