Post Edit Home Help

Key Pages

Home |
-- |
Projects |
-- |
Archaeolog |
Archaeography |
Metamedia Lab |
-- |
Bjørnar Olsen |
Michael Shanks |
Timothy Webmoor |
Christopher Witmore |
----- |
RSS

Changes [Oct 30, 2009]

Articles and Events
Group Members
cyborg ontology
Home
symmetry links
References
Forum Notes
   More Changes...
Changes [Oct 30, 2009]: Articles and Events, Group Members, cyborg ontology, Home, ... MORE

Find Pages

Posted at May 20/2009 10:13AM:
TWM: Notes. . .

We have never been (just) human. Heretical statement in the social sciences and humanities. Yet attention to things over the long term - to at least take seriously archaeology's etymological charter - and starting in medias res draws attention to distributed consciousness and agency as an inherent component of the human. Simply put, more and more tasks have been delegated to things over the course of (pre)history. The ecology of humans-and-things has 'evolved' into ever more intimate and densely inter-dependent relations. Thinking through ontology, of what it is to be human in terms of relationality, takes us away from the humancentricism (as Haraway put it) so woven through modernist thought. Post-essentialism (Woolgar), getting away from dissecting 'the human' out from our extensions in the world, moves us in the direction of equitable relations with the world - things, environment, companion species, and each other. To better equip us to 'live humanly in a sustainable world' (Shanks). To recognize the earth as a cyborg entity (cf. Haraway 1995); all its heterogenous components as symbiots due equal consideration in such an entire ecology.

Beginning from archaeology's charter, far from limiting the discipline to common matters of concern in a confining 'vulgar materialism' and forgetting the partnership with cultural anthropology, opens the field in radical ways to make substantial contributions in designing our cyborgic future.

Return to Key Themes

New Page - Edit this Page - Attach File - Add Image - References - Print
Page last modified by TWM Wed May 20/2009 10:14
You must signin to post comments.
Site Home > Symmetrical Archaeology > cyborg ontology