"Unless We Remember We Cannot Understand": Archaeological Inquiries into the Act of Remembering
Part of: Society for American Archaeology 81st Annual Meeting, Orlando, FL (2016)
This session aims to provide a variety of perspectives on the relationship between archaeological inquiry and memory. Along with asking how the act of archaeological research contributes to memorialization and commemoration, we aim to disentangle definitions of memory for different stakeholder communities by shedding light on various scales of memory (individual, societal, etc.). Further, this session will consider how memory work can shape or challenge current interpretations of the past, and how memory from documents, ethnography, and other sources interlace with archaeological research. What types of memory are typically addressed in archaeology and are certain types privileged over others? This session seeks to examine which people or events get remembered through archaeology, what privileges we take in our memory work, and how, why and for whom we practice archaeological research.
Other Keywords
Memory •
Political economy •
Mesoamerica •
Oral History •
Gold Rush •
Biography •
Household •
gender and sexuality •
landscape management •
Hawaii
Geographic Keywords
North America - California •
Mesoamerica •
Oceania •
North America - Southwest
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-8 of 8)
- Documents (8)
- Entanglement of Memories in Mesoamerica and Applications in the Palenque Region (2016)
- Exploring Traditional Ecological Knowledge in Central California through Ethnographic and Ethnohistorical Records (2016)
- Hñähño Narratives of San Ildefonso, Mexico: Social Memory in the form of Oral History (2016)
- Let the Memory Live Again: Creation and Recreation of Hawaiian Households (2016)
- Memories of Women's Work: Investigating the 19th Century U.S. Army Laundresses' Quarters at Fort Davis, Texas (2016)
- Memory and life in ninteenth-century Sacramento (2016)
- Old Lumber is Missing: Artifacts from Stanford's Chinese Communities (2016)
- Stories Past and Present: Archaeology, lore, and community at von Pfister’s General Store, Benicia, California (2016)