James Lewis lived at the crossroads between remembrance and forgetfulness. He was at once spy, fáquír, pioneering archaeologist, and British deserter under a death-sentence. Escaping across India in 1827, he cast aside his former name and became Charles Masson. This article traces his subsequent journey into Afghanistan, into the blank spaces of the map, in search of the lost cities of Alexander the Great. Searching for antiquity, erasing his own past, his excavations led to the discovery of Alexandria of the Caucasus, on the plains of Bagram. His pursuit of the ancient world is extraordinary: mendacious, full of longing, groundbreaking, hovering between fact and fiction as artfully as himself. This article is likewise a dialogue between th...
The dystopia of the Victorian city is ubiquitous as a trope of nineteenth- and early twentieth-centu...
Stonehenge is the icon of British prehistory, and continues to inspire ingenious investigations and ...
A single glass plate negative formerly in the collection of Howard Carter (most famously the excavat...
This volume forms a powerful antidote to the view that human life is determined by apparently impers...
This article examines the ways in which Thomas Becket was commemorated in books of hours (horae) of ...
A log-coffin excavated in the early nineteenth century proved to be well enough preserved in the ear...
The memory of the Paris Commune of 1871 has long been summoned as an example of urban revolutionary ...
There is a substantial literature on the use of oral history in archaeology, but there has been litt...
Hamadan province in western Iran has always been of particular archaeological significance mainly be...
In Archive Fever, Derrida opens a critical perspective on the status of the trace as that which rema...
Movement, particularly repeated or ritualized movement, can play an important role in the practices ...
H. G. Wells was a literary writer very closely involved in education. From his early career as a tea...
Discussion of the research and process of recreating the pilgrimage experience to the shrine of Thom...
Simon J. James looks back at the richly varied contribution of the science-fiction writer and scienc...
Robert Blair (1845–1923) served as Secretary of the Society of Antiquaries of Newcastle, and editor ...
The dystopia of the Victorian city is ubiquitous as a trope of nineteenth- and early twentieth-centu...
Stonehenge is the icon of British prehistory, and continues to inspire ingenious investigations and ...
A single glass plate negative formerly in the collection of Howard Carter (most famously the excavat...
This volume forms a powerful antidote to the view that human life is determined by apparently impers...
This article examines the ways in which Thomas Becket was commemorated in books of hours (horae) of ...
A log-coffin excavated in the early nineteenth century proved to be well enough preserved in the ear...
The memory of the Paris Commune of 1871 has long been summoned as an example of urban revolutionary ...
There is a substantial literature on the use of oral history in archaeology, but there has been litt...
Hamadan province in western Iran has always been of particular archaeological significance mainly be...
In Archive Fever, Derrida opens a critical perspective on the status of the trace as that which rema...
Movement, particularly repeated or ritualized movement, can play an important role in the practices ...
H. G. Wells was a literary writer very closely involved in education. From his early career as a tea...
Discussion of the research and process of recreating the pilgrimage experience to the shrine of Thom...
Simon J. James looks back at the richly varied contribution of the science-fiction writer and scienc...
Robert Blair (1845–1923) served as Secretary of the Society of Antiquaries of Newcastle, and editor ...
The dystopia of the Victorian city is ubiquitous as a trope of nineteenth- and early twentieth-centu...
Stonehenge is the icon of British prehistory, and continues to inspire ingenious investigations and ...
A single glass plate negative formerly in the collection of Howard Carter (most famously the excavat...