Applied Metaarchaeology

Session Organiser: Kathryn Denning 
(Sheffield University)

In 1992, Embree's edited volume, Metaarchaeology, proclaimed the arrival of a new research speciality, and predicted a growing concentration by philosophers of science on the machinery of archaeological interpretation. However, this (essentially processualist) philosophical approach to archaeology has not captured imaginations as much as Embree hoped. Instead, mirroring developments in the field of 'science studies', there has been a steady increase in the extent and intensity of more socially situated, less abstract historiography and sociology of archaeology, and analysis of archaeological discourse. Unfortunately, externalist theoretical work of this kind can often be seen (like Embree's philosophical metaarchaeology) as just an irrelevant, rarefied body of theory, which belongs primarily to disciplines other than archaeology. However, as this short, discussion-intensive session will confirm, such research can contribute substantively to the discipline's development. Metaarchaeological research may not always provide prescriptions for how better to design projects, excavate, write, or otherwise be an archaeologist; as the papers in this session show, sometimes it does, and sometimes all it can do is pose questions. But in the latter case, it still serves a purpose, for as archaeology becomes more political and more public, its outer and inner contexts are subjects we can ill afford to ignore.


Kurtis Lesick
(Dept of Archaeology, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada. email: lesickk@mail.cadvision.com)

To Undermine or Underscore - Why must Meta-Archaeology be an Anti-Archaeology?


Cornelius Holtorf
(Department of Archaeology, University of Wales (Lampeter), email: cornelius@lamp.ac.uk)

Where do we want to go today? Archaeological fieldtrips reconsidered.


Angela Piccini
(CADW, Crown Building, Cathays Park, Cardiff/ Research School of Archaeology, University of Sheffield)

'Good to think': The consumption of Celtic heritage in Wales.


Kathryn Denning
(Research School of Archaeology, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, email: K.E.Denning@Sheffield.ac.uk)

From alienation to alien nations: Archaeology and alterity at the end of the millennium.


Maggie Ronayne
(Department of Archaeology, Southampton, email: m.m.ronayne@soton.ac.uk)

Wounded Attachments: Practicing Archaeology From 'The Outside'