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Meeting a Learned Society: The Archaeology of ASOR as Reflected in its Annual Meeting, Boston 2017
Author(s) -
Raz Kletter
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
asia anteriore antica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2611-8912
DOI - 10.36253/asiana-1116
Subject(s) - privilege (computing) , politics , ideology , session (web analytics) , neutrality , plenary session , sociology , history , library science , political science , law , computer science , world wide web
This article is a study of the ASOR society, based on a database compiled from the 2017 annual meeting at Boston, one of the largest meetings in its history. Such a study has not been performed before. We study the research of ASOR as represented in the meeting by the roles of the scholar-members (poster presenters, lecture presenters, and session chairs), their research subjects (geographic areas, periods, and topics), and their affiliations (gender and institutions). The analysis leads to several questions – and conclusions – about Archaeology in the Ancient Near East (ANE). Despite important progress by ASOR (e.g., in addressing gender), ANE archaeology is still a privilege of the ‘west’. Rarely a ‘local’ scholar spices up the discussions. Modern politics and ideologies determine what areas are studied and what topics of research are ‘in’. Political neutrality is proclaimed, but not achieved, in the spaces of the meeting. The aim of the article is to foster discussion about these systematic issues, which do not have easy solutions. By presenting quantified data, they can no longer be dismissed as unsubstantiated, personal impressions.

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