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The editors and contributors to this volume focus on the inherent
political nature of archaeology and its impact on the practice of
the discipline. Pointing to the discipline's history of advancing
imperialist, colonialist, and racist objectives, they insist that
archaeology must rethink its muted professional stance and become
more overtly active agents of change. The discipline is not about
an abstract "archaeological record" but about living individuals
and communities, whose lives and heritage suffer from the abuse of
power relationships with states and their agents. Only by
recognizing this power disparity, and adopting a political ethic
for the discipline, can archaeology justify its activities.
Chapters range from a critique of traditional ethical codes, to
examinations of the capitalist motivations and structures within
the discipline, to calls for an engaged, emancipatory archaeology
that improves the lives of the people with whom archaeologists
work. A direct challenge to the discipline, this volume will
provoke discussion, disagreement, and inspiration for many in the
field.
The editors and contributors to this volume focus on the inherent
political nature of archaeology and its impact on the practice of
the discipline. Pointing to the discipline's history of advancing
imperialist, colonialist, and racist objectives, they insist that
archaeology must rethink its muted professional stance and become
more overtly active agents of change. The discipline is not about
an abstract "archaeological record" but about living individuals
and communities, whose lives and heritage suffer from the abuse of
power relationships with states and their agents. Only by
recognizing this power disparity, and adopting a political ethic
for the discipline, can archaeology justify its activities.
Chapters range from a critique of traditional ethical codes, to
examinations of the capitalist motivations and structures within
the discipline, to calls for an engaged, emancipatory archaeology
that improves the lives of the people with whom archaeologists
work. A direct challenge to the discipline, this volume will
provoke discussion, disagreement, and inspiration for many in the
field.
As researchers bring their analytic skills to bear on contemporary
archaeological tourism, they find that it is as much about the
present as the past. Philip Duke's study of tourists gazing at the
remains of Bronze Age Crete highlights this nexus between past and
present, between exotic and mundane. Using personal diaries,
ethnographic interviews, site guidebooks, and tourist brochures,
Duke helps us understand the impact that archaeological sites,
museums and the constructed past have on tourists' view of their
own culture, how it legitimizes class inequality at home as well as
on the island of Crete, both Minoan and modern.
This book introduces in a thorough and self-contained way the
production of electromagnetic radiation by high energy electron
storage rings. This radiation, which is called synchroton
radiation, has become a research tool of wide application.
Physicists, chemists, biologists, geologists, engineers, material
scientists, and other scientific disciplines use it as a structural
probe for the study of surfaces, bulk material, crystals, and
viruses. Solids, liquids and gases can be spectroscopically
analysed by using synchroton radiation. This book brings together
for the first time the properties as well as the means of
production of synchroton radiation and presents them in a coherent
and clear way. It will be an indispensable reference for all those
involved in modern synchroton radiation experiments.
A Cretan village confronts the Nazi juggernaut sweeping across
Europe. A village matriarch tries to hold her family together...Her
grieving son finds a new life in the Cretan Resistance...A naive
English soldier unwillingly finds the warrior in himself...And a
fanatical German paratrooper is forced to question everything he
thought he believed in. The lives of four ordinary people are
irrevocably entwined and their destinies changed forever as each of
them confronts the horrors of war and its echoes down the decades.
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