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?
Italian classical archaeology is,
by definition, a theoretical branch of our discipline. For at least a century
classical archaeologists have made much use of history, art history, philosophy
and other similar paradigms to interpret their data. The problem was that
field practice in this branch of archaeology was introduced quite recently.
On the other hand, prehistoric archaeology
is a different story. The paper will develop previous work of the author
on the history of ideas in archaeology to reconstruct a coherent picture
of the development of Italian archaeological thought.
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
The paper reviews Italian Palaeolithic
and Mesolithic theoretical and methodological issues and debates their
state-of-the-art. Today, past hunter-gatherer research reflects the 'Italian
pluriverse' and represents a somewhat secluded sector of archaeology, being
the subject of Natural Sciences departments.
The present mainstream approach is
culture historical, based on mere chronostratigraphy and artefact typology,
with peculiar implications for culture change, human-(physical) environment
relations, gender archaeology etc. Other perspectives, though existing,
are in a minority. This situation arises from political factors and academic
power control, and it is hardly representative of the rich historical research
tradition.
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
The paper discusses a project on the
Altopiano di Asiago (northern Italian Alps) which was one of the most important
theatres of WW1. Extraordinary air photographic documentation (Italian,
French and British military, both vertical and oblique) is used in a "Hi
Tech" approach (Remote sensing, Image Processing, Virtual Reality, GIS
etc.) to reconstruct the wartime landscape. This "archaeology as theatre"
(scenery recognition of the theatre of war) is highly informative ("war
as information", "Archaeology of the War") and emotionally charged.
This concentration of war infrastructure
provides promising material to study the short and medium-term formation
processes of the archaeological record.
Another aspect is the possibility that
the wartime air photos can be used to filter out the "war layer" ("war
as noise") to reveal the fossil landscapes that pre-existed the conflict
("archaeology through the War") and were shown up by the wartime deforestation,
the most significant such episode of the Holocene.
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)
There are a number of schools of thought
within European archaeology which engage with the "Anthropology of the
Ancient World" and "Post-processual archaeology".
Following such an approach, this paper
will discuss the complex relationship between social relations and their
"reflection" in funerary practice. Cemeteries are studied as a "structured
context" which offers a "metaphorical" picture of reality. Unfortunately,
such analyses often pose more questions than they answer.
The starting point will be a preliminary
analysis of the Pontecagnano (Salerno) cemeteries during the Orientalising
period (last quarter 8th - mid 6th century BC.).
Strategies in the use of space and funerary practice will be studied to
examine differentiation between family and ethnic groups. Attention will
also be paid to the action of varying ideologies within a single context,
strategies of political and cultural "resistance", the relations between
genders and age sets and the demographic and social "representativeness"
of the sample.
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
The paper aims to assess the current
situation in Italian Classical Archaeology from the theoretical point of
view. This will be based on an historical review of the main cultural currents
characterising the last twenty years. A crucial background role is clearly
still played by the idealist tradition, based on frameworks devised by
German and Italian philosophers in the first decades of this century. Since
the 70s, Marxist formulations have introduced some new perspectives, while
processual archaeology has had only minimal impact in classical studies.
This has resulted in a general backwardness
in terms of approaches, methods and techniques, while specialist philological
skills have continued to dominate the scene. In recent years, even if theoretical
debate still attracts only a limited audience, new interations between
traditional approaches and new trends are being experimented with: within
a post-modern framework, a reconciliation between trend and tradition appears,
at least in theory, finally possible.
Andrea Camilli
(Università degli Studi di
Roma "La Sapienza")
Applying models in the Roman Period landscape
studies
When studying Roman period landscapes,
Italian scholars are loath to accept, or at least rarely apply models which
were developed for less complex social structures, even though they can
give interesting results with regard to a number of problems, i.e. land
use, relations between town and countryside, geographical and political
borders.
This is just one aspect of the problem
involving theory in landscape studies: after a substantial phase of theoretical
reflection - though little applied in final results - we are now in a forced
pragmatic phase where the gap between theory and practice is becoming wider
and wider. Model theory, being mostly applied in prehistoric and pre-Roman
research, despite the results that it can give, is generally rejected and
misunderstood. Some examples will be presented, with the aim of understanding
if model theory may be applicable in such complex situations, and if it
is worth applying despite traditional methods of reading landscape data.
Andrea Camilli
(Università degli Studi di
Roma "La Sapienza")
Applying models in the Roman Period landscape
studies
Despite a growing interest in the
study of biological remains from archaeological sites, zooarchaeology has
made a minimal contribution so far to the debate on archaeological theory
in Italy. There is no doubt that the study of animal bones has made much
progress since the not too distant days in which bones were just considered
an undesirable product of archaeological excavations. At the same time
the modern approach to the interpretation of the archaeological evidence
seems to have taken on board the importance of the relationship between
people and the other components of the human ecosystem (animals, plants,
landscape etc.). However, a substantial gap still exists between theory
and practice. Although methodological improvements can be of help in filling
this gap, the solution is more likely to lie in a general revision of the
approach to archaeology, a discipline which is still much constrained by
the idiosyncrasies of the Italian academic and political systems.