Despite changes in archaeological theory and practice over the past 40 years, most archaeologists are still not very good at acknowledging that “significance” is context-dependent and non-material. In this paper I present two cases studies from New England where archaeologists collaborated with Native peoples on sites that had significant preservation concerns. I evaluate to what extent these projects were successful in their goal of decolonizing archaeology. I call for a definition of materiality that acknowledges that tangible objects and their intangible contexts and meanings are inextricable, and that values are continuously created and recreated in the present by a variety of memory communities
Archaeology has a long history of dehumanizing the past by placing artifacts at the center of archae...
Archaeology is a complex discipline that has contributed to the public understanding of the history ...
More than a century ago, scientific archaeology was caught up in the webs of colonialism. Around the...
Despite changes in archaeological theory and practice over the past 40 years, most archaeologists ar...
Collected sites are commonly seen as places requiring expert intervention to ‘save the past’ from de...
This article reconsiders how archaeologists find Indigenous people, particularly Native Americans, i...
This article reconsiders how archaeologists find Indigenous people, particularly Native Americans, i...
This article reconsiders how archaeologists find Indigenous people, particularly Native Americans, i...
The archaeological contribution to materiality has to date been less widely appreciated by practitio...
In an effort to decolonize the field, archaeologists, particularly historical archaeologists, have u...
In the wider professional community gathered around the notion of archaeological heritage, there is ...
The archaeological study of Native Americans during colonial periods in North America has centered l...
The archaeological study of Native Americans during colonial periods in North America has centered l...
This article seeks to define common ground from which to build a more integrated approach to the per...
Archaeology has a long history of dehumanizing the past by placing artifacts at the center of archae...
Archaeology is a complex discipline that has contributed to the public understanding of the history ...
More than a century ago, scientific archaeology was caught up in the webs of colonialism. Around the...
Despite changes in archaeological theory and practice over the past 40 years, most archaeologists ar...
Collected sites are commonly seen as places requiring expert intervention to ‘save the past’ from de...
This article reconsiders how archaeologists find Indigenous people, particularly Native Americans, i...
This article reconsiders how archaeologists find Indigenous people, particularly Native Americans, i...
This article reconsiders how archaeologists find Indigenous people, particularly Native Americans, i...
The archaeological contribution to materiality has to date been less widely appreciated by practitio...
In an effort to decolonize the field, archaeologists, particularly historical archaeologists, have u...
In the wider professional community gathered around the notion of archaeological heritage, there is ...
The archaeological study of Native Americans during colonial periods in North America has centered l...
The archaeological study of Native Americans during colonial periods in North America has centered l...
This article seeks to define common ground from which to build a more integrated approach to the per...
Archaeology has a long history of dehumanizing the past by placing artifacts at the center of archae...
Archaeology is a complex discipline that has contributed to the public understanding of the history ...
More than a century ago, scientific archaeology was caught up in the webs of colonialism. Around the...