Theory and World Archaeology: Italy (Part 2)

Session Organiser: Mark Pearce
(Nottingham University)

This part session proposes to let Italian archaeologists speak for themselves, presenting their own theoretical agenda - linked to the nature of their archaeological record and their contingent social and historical situation. The picture that will emerge is of an archaeology which reads and is aware of the debate in the English-speaking world, but does not necessarily consider it completely relevant to its own particular problems.

 



Alessandro Guidi
(Istituto di Storia, Università di Verona, Vicolo Cieco dietro San Francesco 5, 37129 Verona VR, Italy, email: aguidi@chiostro.univr.it)

Is Italian archaeology theoretical?



Amilcare Bietti
(Dep di Biologia Animale e dell'Uomo, Università di Roma "La Sapienze", piazale Aldo Moro 5, 00185 Roma, Italy)

What is new in Italian palaeolithic archaeology?



Diego Angelucci & Sarah Milliken
(Departimento di Scienze Geologiche e Paleontologiche, Università di Ferrara, Corso Ercole I d'Este 32, 44100 Ferrara, Italy)

Palaeolithic and Mesolithic Theory and Method in Italian archaeology



Armando De Guio
(Dipartimento di Scienze dell'Antichità, Università di Padova, Pizza Capitaniato 7, 35139 Padova, Italy)

Archaeology of the War, Archaeology through the War



Mariassunta Cuozzo
(Dip di studi del mondo classico e del Mediterraneo antico, Istituto Universitario Orientale, piazza San Domenico Maggiore (Palazzo Corigliano), 80134 Napoli, Italy)

Interpreting funerary ideology: the orientalising cemeteries of Pontecagnono (Salerno)



Nicola Terrenato
(Department of Archaeology, University of Durham, South Road, Durham DH1 3LE)

Between trend and tradition: Italian Classical Archaeology in the last twenty years



Andrea Camilli
(Università degli Studi di Roma "La Sapienza")

Applying models in the Roman Period landscape studies



Andrea Camilli
(Università degli Studi di Roma "La Sapienza")

Applying models in the Roman Period landscape studies