1st Edition

Critical Historical Archaeology

By Mark P Leone Copyright 2010
    248 Pages
    by Routledge

    248 Pages
    by Routledge

    How can we use the past to make sense of the issues and problems that concern us in the present? Mark Leone, the leading critical theorist in historical archaeology, urges archaeologists to view their discipline as an activist pursuit. This volume is partly his autobiographical reflection on a thirty five year career, part a collection of Leone’s classic writings on Annapolis, Williamsburg, Shakertown, St. Mary’s, and other key sites, and part a synthesis of his current thinking on how historical archaeology can engage the cultural and political issues of our time. Critical Historical Archaeology is an important summary of the work and thinking of one of our most thoughtful, influential archaeologists.

    Part 1 Why Excavate?; Chapter 1 Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia; Chapter 2 Shakertown at Pleasant Hill, Kentucky; Chapter 3 Catholic and Protestant Relations in Maryland; Chapter 4 Establishing Site Significance; Chapter 5 The Virtues of Various Archaeological Theories; Part 2 Excavating Ideology; Chapter 6 The William Paca Garden as Ideology, Not Taste; Chapter 7 Technologies of the Self; Chapter 8 Ideology at Work as Religion; Chapter 9 Mormon Fences; Chapter 10 Mental Instability; Chapter 11 Subversive Genealogy; Part 3 Changing Things; Chapter 12 Public Tours; Chapter 13 A Lthusser at Work; Chapter 14 Exhibits; Chapter 15 The Ending; Chapter 101 Coda;

    Biography

    Mark P Leone