I sat at the CHAT conference (see last post) listening and letting little bubbles of thought pop in my over-stimulated brain.
Here are a few notes:
Reverse engineering in archaeology (Gabriel Moshenska). I realised that no-one will ever “do” archaeology in the way we did in the 1960s, 70s and 80s. The organisations have changed, there has been a degree of innovation (though not as much as you might expect), some techniques have evolved, new technologies have been added, and health and safety is far more developed. I think we probably had more adventures in the early days (“the heroic age of archaeology”) though…
You can’t take the archaeologist out of the process.
The material world is changing minute by minute – how can archaeology deal with this?
We are surveying the past in the present.
Critical code studies (Ross Wilson) and the archaeology of the Internet.
The archaeology of illicit and illegal activities (Gabriella Soto). When a discarded backpack might be evidence of a life/death struggle.
Overburden (Craig Cessford). The importance of the surface.
When people are highly suspicious of archaeologists (Suzanne Lilley) and when you might be damned for publishing!
Agressive v “nice” roundabouts (Matt Edgeworth). Non-places, taken-for-granted things. The fascination of the familiar. Breaking rules (archaeological and societal).
Exploring hinterlands by just “wandering about (Paul Graves-Brown). The importance of talking to people.
Prague summer villas look as if constructed from children’s building blocks (Vaclav Matousek).
The archaeology of “hopelessness” (Quintin Lewis) and the necessity of looking up (above the shopfronts) as well as down. The archaeological importance of friendly taxi-drivers!
Archaeology as reportage (Rob Maxwell).
The Archaeology of Occupy. Marjolin Kok and Elles Besselsen mull over the materiality of anti-materialists.
Appropriating the mass-produced object (that is an important concept for me!) Making matter speak.
Digitally excavating photographs and postcards. Using postcards as evidence of past values (Sian Jones)
The archaeology and transformation (and theft) of concrete slabs (Steven Leech and Ruth Colton).
The end time and archaeology (Donnelly Hayde). Perhaps we won’t last long enough to finish our PhDs?
Getting modern objects recognised as important by the powers-that-be. Why does the past end in 1700? (Hilary Orange).
Turning one’s nose up at privies, and a potty on the mantelpiece (Paul Mullins).
A discovery – the Czech “Tramping Movement”. Alberta, Manitoba, cowboys and potlach in the Czech forest. (Tomas Hirt and James Symonds).
The sound of rust (Ron Wright).