Why Social Archaeology Matters
Part of: Society for American Archaeology 81st Annual Meeting, Orlando, FL (2016)
We currently find ourselves on the cusp of significant change, as tensions related to race, ethnicity, religion, and gender are currently at the forefront of today's social struggles. Archaeology, specifically social archaeology has the opportunity to inform and enrich current social movements. The goal of this session is to emphasize the contributions of archaeologists to understanding the social processes of the present. AAA president Leith Mullings (2015) recently outlined her vision of "why anthropology matters" by emphasizing anthropology’s relationship to recent social movements –we argue that archaeology has an important role to play in this conversation. Human agency is widely regarded as an important generative force of cultural change and archaeological research on gender, identity, class, power, religion, and ethnicity has exploded in the past two decades. In an effort to make archaeology relevant to the broader public, archaeologists have successfully emphasized the ecological implications for the study of archaeology, however, we have largely ignored the profound insights that archaeology can provide into understanding the role of human agency and social forces in generating wide-scale change. As a consequence, we may be missing opportunities to make archaeology relevant to events that are currently playing out in the modern world.
Other Keywords
Social archaeology •
Mexico •
Historical •
Politics •
water •
Aztec •
Mesoamerica •
Migration •
Medicine •
Borderlands
Geographic Keywords
Mesoamerica •
North America - Northeast •
Central America •
Caribbean •
North America - Midwest •
North America - California
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-12 of 12)
- Documents (12)
- Archaeological Histories of Urban Indians and Why They Matter (2016)
- "Clean Up Your Mess, Chino": Contested Space, Boredom, and Vulnerability among Central American Migrants Crossing Southern Mexico. (2016)
- Global Indigeneity in Southern Mexico and the Value of Social Archaeology (2016)
- Indigenous Histories and the Queer Future of Archaeological Anachronism (2016)
- Introduction: Why Social Archaeology Matters (2016)
- Palimpsests in the Colonial Borderland at Black Star Canyon, Orange County, California. (2016)
- Queering the Narrative: Diverse Pasts and Political Futures (2016)
- Responsibility for the Past, Responsibility to the Present (2016)
- Social Archaeology and Debating Local Scholars (2016)
- The Social Archaeology of Politics (2016)
- The social politics of health and healing: archaeological approaches to social meanings and practices of illness and well-being. (2016)
- Taking Their Water for Our City: Archaeology and Water Rights in New York and Beyond (2016)