The critique of archaeology made from an indigenous and postcolonial perspective has been largely accepted, at least in theory, in many settler colonies, from Canada to New Zealand. In this paper, I would like to expand such critique in two ways: on the one hand, I will point out some issues that have been left unresolved; on the other hand, I will address indigenous and colonial experiences that are different from British settler colonies, which have massively shaped our understanding of indigeneity and the relationship of archaeology to it. I am particularly concerned with two key problems: alterity – how archaeologists conceptualize difference – and collaboration – how archaeologists imagine their relationship with people from a differen...
Constructed as “nonwhite others,” we were racialized by the same alterity-producing dialectic that e...
In this chapter, I want to explore a framework which was developed to deal with the archaeology and ...
Over the past two decades, archaeology in British Columbia has been marked by two dramatic changes: ...
The critique of archaeology made from an indigenous and postcolonial perspective has been largely ac...
More than a century ago, scientific archaeology was caught up in the webs of colonialism. Around the...
Archaeologists tend to rely on scientific methods to reconstruct past histories, an approach that ca...
[Extract] Having recently returned to full-time employment in commercial archaeology after a period ...
An outgrowth of demands for ethical treatment and repatriation of their ancestral remains, Indigenou...
<p><span lang="EN-US">Defining Indigenous Archaeology is as difficult as defining “Indigenous”. In s...
In an effort to decolonize the field, archaeologists, particularly historical archaeologists, have u...
Rethinking Colonial Pasts through Archaeology explores the archaeologies of daily living left by the...
International audienceMuseums contribution to the European colonial project was and is still critici...
This inquiry explores indigenous archaeology as a form of resistance to dominant Western science. Li...
Archaeology is not just a technique for writing history: a statement that is very evident when worki...
Prehistoric archeology in North America is driven by a process of decolonization that forces us to q...
Constructed as “nonwhite others,” we were racialized by the same alterity-producing dialectic that e...
In this chapter, I want to explore a framework which was developed to deal with the archaeology and ...
Over the past two decades, archaeology in British Columbia has been marked by two dramatic changes: ...
The critique of archaeology made from an indigenous and postcolonial perspective has been largely ac...
More than a century ago, scientific archaeology was caught up in the webs of colonialism. Around the...
Archaeologists tend to rely on scientific methods to reconstruct past histories, an approach that ca...
[Extract] Having recently returned to full-time employment in commercial archaeology after a period ...
An outgrowth of demands for ethical treatment and repatriation of their ancestral remains, Indigenou...
<p><span lang="EN-US">Defining Indigenous Archaeology is as difficult as defining “Indigenous”. In s...
In an effort to decolonize the field, archaeologists, particularly historical archaeologists, have u...
Rethinking Colonial Pasts through Archaeology explores the archaeologies of daily living left by the...
International audienceMuseums contribution to the European colonial project was and is still critici...
This inquiry explores indigenous archaeology as a form of resistance to dominant Western science. Li...
Archaeology is not just a technique for writing history: a statement that is very evident when worki...
Prehistoric archeology in North America is driven by a process of decolonization that forces us to q...
Constructed as “nonwhite others,” we were racialized by the same alterity-producing dialectic that e...
In this chapter, I want to explore a framework which was developed to deal with the archaeology and ...
Over the past two decades, archaeology in British Columbia has been marked by two dramatic changes: ...