Engendered Archaeologies: Intersubjectivity in Archaeological Heritage Practice and Interpretation
Part of: Society for American Archaeology 81st Annual Meeting, Orlando, FL (2016)
Heritage work, including archaeology and related disciplines, has been recognized as an intersubjective endeavor but theoretical examinations largely sidestep gender as a framework for analysis. However, critical approaches to participatory models of heritage practice necessitate a theoretical and action-oriented engagement with gender. This session aims to bring together two currently disparate contributions to archaeology— stakeholder-focused archaeological heritage work and an analysis of gender in the archaeological record. We hope to examine the complex entanglements that arise when working with stakeholders and interpreting and representing archaeological remains. Explorations may include feminist, queer, postcolonial, indigenous and other theoretical frameworks as well as considerations of aspects of selfhood including race, class, religion, age, etc. These may also draw on methodologies like community-based, collaborative, activist, participatory, ethical, action-oriented and public approaches. How are collaborative archaeology projects and heritage work more broadly engendered? How do participants in archaeological and heritage projects perform and enact gender? How do discourses of masculinity, femininity, and queer identities influence all phases of research: from conception through public engagement, fieldwork, analysis, presentation, publication, and preservation? At the heart of these questions lies an exploration of practice, power, memory, and narrative production that will enhance efforts at preserving and understanding heritage.
Other Keywords
Gender •
community archaeology •
heritage •
Public Archaeology •
Archaeology •
Ethics •
Fieldwork •
Ethnoarchaeology •
Indigenous •
collaboration
Geographic Keywords
North America - Southeast •
South Asia •
Mesoamerica •
AFRICA •
Arctic •
North America - Midwest •
North America - Northeast
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-14 of 14)
- Documents (14)
- A Chained Melody: Queering Ceramic Industries in 19th century South Carolina (2016)
- Cyberfeminism, Virtual Worlds, and Resisting the Feminization of Digital Archaeology (2016)
- Discourses of the Haunted: Community-Based Archaeology at the Mount Pleasant Indian Industrial Boarding School (2016)
- The duality of female archetypes in facilitating fieldwork: case studies in Arizona and Jordan (2016)
- Finding and ‘heritaging’ women in the landlord villages of Iran (2016)
- Gender, Masculinity, and Professional-Avocational Heritage Collaborations (2016)
- Gendered Heritage: Interspaces and Intersubjectivity (2016)
- Historical Illustration as Narrative: A Critical Inquiry (2016)
- "I don’t know all of these stories": Method and Intention in Community-Oriented Research and Heritage Projects (2016)
- Intersubjectivity and a Theory of Actively Engaged Heritage Practice (2016)
- Learning to Listen: Quinhagak Voices Teaching about Gender (2016)
- Legacies of Ethiopian Women: Revealing Heritage through an indigenous animistic ontology (2016)
- Male-Female Sexuality in the "Fruit Bearing" Maya New Year Celebrations: Understanding the Past and Present Heritage through Participatory and Archaeological Studies (2016)
- Trigger Material Culture of the Greco-Roman World (2016)