Alienation and Redemption: The Praxis of (Roman) Archaeology in Britain
Author(s) -
Jake Weekes,
Sadie Watson,
Lacey Wallace,
Francesca Mazzilli,
Andrew Gardner,
Marta Alberti
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
theoretical roman archaeology journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2515-2289
DOI - 10.16995/traj.374
Subject(s) - praxis , alienation , session (web analytics) , manifesto , field trip , sociology , feeling , archaeology , history , political science , psychology , social psychology , law , business , advertising
The TRAC session that led to this series of combined mini-papers was consciously designed as a forum for discussion, the aim being to consider how to tackle perceived systemic problems in the archaeology of Roman Britain (as much as the archaeology of other periods) that lead to destructive methods, interpretive fallacies and poor job satisfaction. The shared feeling of those present seemed to be that the systems prevalent in both developer-funded (or ‘commercial’) archaeology, university archaeology departments and even in the museum context are overly driven by ideas of competition, division and acquisition for its own sake, the apparently dominant neoliberal values of our time. Such values are not akin to the valuing of the historic environment per se, but rather promote constraining hierarchies within and between organisations, and a basic lack of communication and team working.
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