Session organizers: Michael Shanks (Stanford University), Timothy Webmoor (University of Oxford), and Christopher Witmore (Brown University)
Session abstract
‘Ta archaia’, quite literally ‘old things’ are at the etymological root of archaeology. So a concern with things, an obligation to 'materiality', a commitment to landscape runs to the heart of the profession.
The weather patterns across the social and natural sciences are shifting; and many of these shifts are centered upon a (re)turn to things. Under the banner of things, the traditional social-natural science divide (and its ontological grounding) is being challenged from different positions (actor-network-theory, artificial intelligence, posthumanism, cognitive science, environmentalism, phenomenology, science and technology studies) and archaeologists are recognizing these profound transformations. However, instead of reassessing the unique potential of their own disciplinary practice and, in turn, contributing to and advancing these debates, practitioners have largely reconfirmed an old and deeply rooted inferiority complex of being a second string social science by adding the products of forerunner disciplines and sciences to their accounts of the past (an attitude which is in fact a product of the very rifted regime that these new discourses want to do away with).
This session takes leave of such a parasitical attitude (an attitude which insults archaeology) and revisits core aspects of the archaeological. Drawing together a diverse group of archaeologists, it offers a bold picture of what it is archaeologists do. It builds a case that at the heart of archaeology is a trans-disciplinary set of practices and understandings that address the very nature of what it is to be human and how in turn humans relate to things and companion animals. It speaks to our unique and long-term perspective on human relations with material goods, the design of things, and the nature of the past. Placing to one side the narrow foci of human intentionality, essentialist notions of property and meaning, this session offers far more interesting and refreshing accounts of our shared/mingled material world and the importance of the past. Indeed, the radical ethical implication of a symmetrical approach is to redeploy humanism’s care for people to encompass a collective of humans, things and non-humans (including our fellow creatures).
In the course of detailing a more democratic ontology this session will address a number of questions:
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