Ancestral Voices and Post-Disciplinary Worlds in Archaeology
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Köp båda 2 för 1509 krNick Shepherd is Associate Professor of African Studies and Archaeology at the University of Cape Town and Head of the African Studies Unit. He was founding editor of the journal Archaeologies: Journal of the World Archaeological Congress. In 2004-5 he was based at Harvard University as a Mandela Fellow. In 2008 he was a Visiting Professor at Brown University, and in 2009 at the University of Basel. He has published widely on questions of archaeology and society in Africa and on questions of public history and heritage. His books include the volume Desire lines; space, memory and identity in the post-apartheid city (Routledge 2007, with Martin Hall and Noeleen Murray) and New South African keywords (Jacana Media-Ohio University Press, 2008, with Steven Robins). Alejandro Haber is Titular Professor at the Universidad Nacional de Catamarca and Independent Researcher at the Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientficas y Tcnicas, San Fernando del Valle de Catamarca, Argentina. He has been researching the theoretical and methodological assumptions of the archaeological discipline from different approaches, including sociology, history and philosophy of archaeology. He is regionally specialized in the South Central Andes, and has conducted research in the same area for decades. He is particularly interested in challenging Western assumptions as codified within the archaeological discipline while developing wider conversations with local and Quechua-Aymara epistemes, within the poscolonial context of frontier expansion. His recent work develops a no-methodology as un-disciplined archaeology. He is co-editor of the Arqueologa Suramericana Arqueologa Sul-Americana, published in Spanish and Portuguese. His recent books include Hacia una arqueologa de las arqueologas sudamericanas (Uniandes, Bogot, Colombia, 2004), Domesticidad e interaccin en los Andes meridionales (Unicauca, Popayn, Colombia, 2008) and La casa, las cosas y los dioses (Encuentro/Humanidades, Crdoba/Catamarca, Argentina, 2012). Recent publications in the English language include papers on intercultural archaeology (World Archaeology 39:2, 2007), on animism and post-Western perspectives (Cambridge Archaeological Journal 19:3, 2009), on WAC and globalized science (with Nick Shepherd, Public Archaeology 10:2, 2011) and on Un-disciplining Archaeology (Archaeologies 8:1, 2012).
Chapter 1: After ethics. Ancestral voices and post-disciplinary worlds in archaeology: an introduction.- Chapter 2: Undisciplining archaeological ethics .- Chapter 3: Do as I say and not as I do. On the gap between good ethics and reality in African archaeology.- Chapter 4: Archaeology and development: ethics of an inevitable relationship.- Chapter 5: The mark of the Indian still inhabits our body. On ethics and disciplining in South American archaeology.- Chapter 6: Excess of hospitality. Critical semiopraxis and theoretical risks in postcolonial justice.- Chapter 7: On burial grounds and city spaces reconfiguring the normative.- Chapter 8: Archaeology after archaeology.