Descripción
Rubina Raja (ed). Pages: xxii + 424 p. Illustrations:149 b/w, 166 col., 4 tables b/w., 1 maps b/w, 7 maps color. Language(s):English. Publication Year:2023. Brepols. ISBN: 978-2-503-60564-7. Paperback --- SUMMARY Archaeology as a discipline has undergone significant changes over the past decades, in particular concerning best practices for how to handle the vast quantities of data that the discipline generates. Much of this data has often ended up in physical or, more recently, digital archives and been left untouched for years, despite containing critical information. But as many recent research projects explore how best to unleash the potential of these archives through publication, digitization, and improved accessibility, attention is now turning to the best practices that should underpin this trend. In this volume, scholars turn their attention to how best to work with and shape archaeological archives, and what this means for the field as a whole. The majority of case studies here explore archaeological sites in the eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East, some of which are conflict zones today. However, the contributions also showcase more broadly the depth of research on archaeological archives as a whole, and offer reflections upon the relationship between archaeological practices and archival forms. In so doing, the volume is able to offer a unique dialogue on best practices for the dissemination and synthetization of knowledge from archives more generally, whether physical or digital. TABLE OF CONTENTS List of Illustrations Abbreviations 1. Shaping Archaeological Archives: Fieldwork, Collections, and Private Archives Issues of Curation and Accessibility Rubina Raja 2. Who Can Access the Past? Archives, Technological Solutionism and Digital Colonialism in (Post-) Conflict Syria Zena Kamash 3. Unclassified: Structured Silences in the Archaeological Archive Jen A. Baird 4. Collaborative Curation of Digital Archaeological Archives: Promise, Prospects, and Challenges Anne Hunnell Chen 5. Archiving Palmyra: Outcomes of Inquiry into Archaeological Legacy Data Olympia Bobou, Amy C. Miranda, Rubina Raja, and Julia Steding 6. Considerations in Archive Archaeology: Past and Present Colonialism in the Study of Palmyra s Archaeology and History Amy C. Miranda and Rubina Raja 7. Revisiting Harald Ingholt's Excavation Diaries: Zooming in on Two Graves in the South-West Necropolis of Palmyra and their Inscriptions Rubina Raja and Julia Steding 8. Pompeii as an Archive Eric Poehler 9. Digitizing Knossos Using the Sir Arthur Evans Archive John Pouncett and Andrew Shapland 10. Using Legacy Data to Reconstruct the University of Michigan's Early Twentieth-Century Excavation Methodology at Karanis Andrew T. Wilburn 11. Placing the Container before the Content: The Cases of the 'Iron Field' and 'Mosaic Field' at Eski Kăhta at the Dörner Archive Forschungsstelle Asia Minor, Münster Emanuele E. Intagliata 12. Excavating Time and Space: The Archive of the Hama Expedition in the National Museum of Denmark Anne Haslund Hansen and John Lund 13. The Mosaics from the 1928 1929 Campaigns of the Joint British-American Expedition to Gerasa: Drawings by Grace and Dorothy Crowfoot Lisa Brody and Rubina Raja 14. Digitizing the Archaeological Finds and the Photographic Archive of the German Excavation Campaigns in Samarra (1911-1913) at the Museum für Islamische Kunst in Berlin Miriam Kühn 15. Analogue Problems Through a Digital Lens: Reconsidering Underlying Issues with Archaeological Archival Practice Using the Digitization of the Samarra Archives Rhiannon Garth Jones 16. Digital Data and Recontextualization: The Case of South Italian Pottery Vinnie Nørskov and Marie Hélène van de Ven 17. From Paper to Open-Air Archive: Reconstructing Illegal Excavations and Art-Market Circulations of Archaeological Objects in the Case of the Archaic Sanctuary on Timpone della Motta, Southern Italy Gloria Mittica, Carmelo Colelli, and Jan Kindberg Jacob. N° de ref. del artículo 02328
Contactar al vendedor
Denunciar este artículo