Theory and World Archaeology: Theory
in French Archaeology
Session Organisers: Chris Scarre & Laurent Olivier
(Cambridge University and Muséedes
Antiquités Nationals, St Germain-en-Laye, France)
The aim of this session is to explore
a range of current theoretical approaches in French archaeology. The debate
on archaeology in France has been less visible than in Britain and North
America and rather different in nature, but many of the same issues have
been discussed. Speakers in this session include Françoise Audouze
(Paris I) on palaeohistorical and technological approaches to the Upper
Palaeolithic in France, Serge Cassen (Nantes) on phenomenology of the imagination
and Armorican parietal art, Anick Coudart (Paris I) on why there is no
post-processual archaeology in France, Jean-Pierre Legendre (Metz) on French
archaeology in eastern France under Nazi occupation, and Laurent Olivier
(Musée des Antiquités Nationales) on theoretical perspectives
in French archaeology. The session is jointly organised by Chris Scarre
(McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, Cambridge) and Laurent
Olivier (Musée des Antiquités Nationales, St Germain-en-Laye).
Papers will be delivered in English or French.
Chris Scarre
(McDonald Institute, Cambridge)
Theoretical archaeology in France and Britain
It is now almost twenty years since
Audouze and Leroi-Gourhan described French archaeology as a 'Continental
insularity'. How far have attitudes to theoretical archaeology changed
in France during that period, and how closely do those changes compare
with trends in British archaeology? The divergence between the two traditions
which was so pronounced in the 1960s and 1970s has steadily narrowed in
the post-processualist 1980s and 1990s. Yet theory remains a much less
conspicuous feature of French archaeology and fundamental differences in
attitude remain. French writers prominent in post-processualist archaeology
in Britain have generally exerted little influence on the archaeology of
their home country. One way of judging relations between the two traditions
is to consider the British reaction to leading French archaeological publications
during the past 20 years. Valuable insight is also gained by examining
the changing role of theoretical considerations in the mainstream literature
of French prehistory.
Françoise Audouze
(CNRS, Paris)
From technology to palaeohistory
The newest trend in French Palaeolithic
studies can be qualified as palaeohistory based on comparative technology.
It derives from the two former approaches: the chronostratigraphic approach
of the François Bordes school and the synchronic palaeoethnological
approach of the Leroi-Gourhan school. The new approach analyses correlated
changes in lithic technology and typology over the long term. It results
in identifying technological stages which define, along with "fossiles
directeurs", both previously known cultural entities from the Late Glacial
and new ones. It succeeds in explaining why technological changes occur
in knapping techniques.
The second main trend is cognitive
and is based like the previous one on technology, mostly on experimental
work. It aims to identify and evaluate technical changes which imply changes
in concepts, mental abilities and know-how, perception and anticipation.
Some of its supporters argue strongly against the "final object fallacy"
and in favour of technically conscious early prehistoric humans.
Anick Coudart
(CNRS, Paris)
Why is there no post-processual archaeology
in France?
As a large part of its vocabulary
has been borrowed from French intellectuals, it may seem surprising that
post-processual archaeology has not had any impact in France. The reasons
for this are deeply rooted in French society and identity, but are barely
visible as they are part of a double paradox.
Anglo-American scholars belong to an
intellectual tradition which is essentially empirical, based on (sensory)
experience; when confronted with an incoherence they tend to consider their
conceptual approach inadequate rather than their observations. This leads
them to search continually for new concepts (which agree better with their
data). As for the French intellectual, he/she moves in a Cartesian tradition
based on a reasoned and coherent representation of things. Phenomena are
governed by a rationality complex and multidimensional, but which forms
an indivisible whole. If and when the result of an analysis appears inconsistent,
the French scholar will tend to discount his/her observations not
as irrational, but as unrepresentative. In order to confirm the abstract
vision which unconsciously forms the basis of his social, political and
intellectual identity, he or she permanently reviews their data. As a result,
the quest of Anglo-American archaeologists for concepts and theories is
viewed with perplexity or condescension by the French; and the French are
seen by the Anglo-American as forever bogged down in their data.
This French preoccupation with coherent
conceptual frameworks, and the fact that French society has never been
"modern", result in a situation in which, without denying any of them,
single binary relations (on which every intellectual and mental construct,
and every creation of meaning are based) are always seen as insufficient
to render reality. In what are called sciences de l'homme et de la société,
the social dimension of history has never ceased to be predominant; this
concerns equally those scholars who appeal to modernity and those who initiated
the concept of post-modernity. For them, history or archaeology can only
be the study of the interactions between human beings, nature and the diversity
of other cultures.
For those French archaeologists who
have managed to grasp the notion of post-processualism, it appears part
of the history of an archaeology which is not theirs, or even a respectable
exoticism.
Serge Cassen
(CNRS, Nantes)
The form of a town
What is customarily called 'Neolithic
parietal art' or 'megalithic art' is, together with the study of stone
alignments in western France, probably the only area of research which
reproduces basically unchanged the terminology and interpretations of the
19th century. This paper will address epistemological questions relating
to the language of the human sciences, and in particular that of the inexact
sciences. Adopting a methodological principal from the work of Bachelard
we shall try to make clear why a phenomenology of the imagination (attempted
by Lautréamont as long ago as 1869) is in our view the most profitable
direction for progress in the domain of symbols. The constant risk is that
of basing intuitive interpretations entirely on arbitrary cultural values,
especially where the archaeological context which might support the interpretation
is completely masked. The problem is the same whether it relates to the
quality of the materials, the techniques used to execute the engravings
and their relative chronology, or finally the historico-cultural context
in which they are situated.
Jean-Pierre Legendre
(Service Régionale de l¹Archéologie
de Lorraine, Metz)
Ideological propagands and archaeology in Alsace
(eastern France) during the second annexation (1940-1944)
After the armistice of Rethondes in
June 1940, the French province of Alsace was joined to Germany and integrated
with bordering German province of Baden into the Gau Baden-Elsass. A period
of four years ensued, during which the Nazis tried by all the means available
to germanise the population as quickly as possible. One of the favourite
themes of the Nazi propaganda was that Alsatians were descended from very
early Germanic populations who settled themselves centuries ago in this
territory, and that they were Volksdeutscher whose integration in the Reich
was natural. Archaeological research played an important part in attempts
to reinforce that theory, and it was accordingly especially favoured by
the occupation authorities. This explains the rapid installation in Alsace
by the German administration of a department in charge of archaeology (Landesamt
für Ur- und Frühgeschichte). Besides rescue excavations and settlement
survey, this service took part in propaganda exhibitions, the most famous
being 2000 Jahre Kampfe am Oberrhein (2000 years of battles on the Upper
Rhine). NSDAP's archaeological branch (the Reichsbund für Deutsche
Vorgeschichte) was also interested in Alsace, studying the Mont Sainte-Odile
hill-fort in order to demonstrate that it was a Germanic fortress.
Laurent Olivier
(Musée des Antiquités
Nationales, St Germain-en-Laye, France)
The French response to the globalisation of
archaeology
French archaeology finds its origins
in the Enlightenment of the late 18th century. The discovery of 'Gaulish'
remains coincided with the grasp in political consciousness of the role
of the "nation". The new discipline of archaeology, in its practice of
exhuming material traces of national origins, joined with the political
project which legitimated the Republic by finding its roots in a cultural
continuity going back through time immemorial, and inventing for it its
own cultural tradition. More generally, the new vision of the past which
was established with the Revolution situated the local history of the origins
of the French nation in a global historical perspective, of universal relevance,
which was the history of the whole of humankind. At the theoretical level,
that new approach to 'national antiquities' depends on an ehtnographic
reading of the remains of the past, and is at the same time characterised
by a unilinear reconstruction of evolution which derives from the idea
of historical progress.
Thus in contrast to the Anglo-Saxon
tradition, which investigates the meaning of archaeological remains and
which seeks to produce or borrow a theory to explain them, the French tradition
considers archaeological remains from an ethnographic perspective. In this
sense, it places theory not at the stage of interpreting archaeological
remains, as in Anglo-Saxon research, but much earlier, at the level of
meaning held by the remains. In the French perspective, the archaeological
remains, as material traces of human activity, provide evidence for the
organisation of those activities, and, at a further remove, for the society
which produced them.
The process of globalisation which
has gathered speed in recent years throws this French model into crisis.
The end of the Cold War, German reunification and the creation of a European
community, as well as the development of the present-day multicultural
societies, put in crisi not only the legitimacy of nation-states, but also
of the historical and archaeological representations on which they rest.
The current decline of nation-states, of which France provides the oldest
European example, leads irreversibly to a revision of the historical interpretations
from which the political structures derive their legitimacy. We are therefore
faced today with a crisis in the French historical tradition in the broadest
sense, along with, more generally by a calling into question of the paradigms
on which rests our approach to the past.