Cultural Transmission and Material Culture: Breaking Down Boundaries edited by Miriam Stark, Brenda Bowser, and Lee Horne
In: American anthropologist: AA, Band 111, Heft 4, S. 540-541
ISSN: 1548-1433
5 Ergebnisse
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In: American anthropologist: AA, Band 111, Heft 4, S. 540-541
ISSN: 1548-1433
In: Before farming: the archaeology and anthropology of hunter-gatherers, Band 2008, Heft 4, S. 1-19
ISSN: 1476-4261
In: Big data & society, Band 8, Heft 1
ISSN: 2053-9517
UNESCO World Heritage sites are places of outstanding significance and often key sources of information that influence how people interact with the past today. The process of inscription on the UNESCO list is complicated and intersects with political and commercial controversies. But how well are these controversies known to the public? Wikipedia pages on these sites offer a unique dataset for insights into public understanding of heritage controversies. The unique technicity of Wikipedia, with its bot ecosystem and editing mechanics, shapes how knowledge about cultural heritage is constructed and how controversies are negotiated and communicated. In this article, we investigate the patterns of production, consumption, and spatial and temporal distributions of Wikipedia pages for World Heritage cultural sites. We find that Wikipedia provides a distinctive context for investigating how people experience and relate to the past in the present. The agency of participants is highly constrained, but distinctive, behind-the-scenes expressions of cultural heritage activism are evident. Concerns about state-like actors, violence and destruction, deal-making, etc. in the World Heritage inscription process are present, but rare on Wikipedia's World Heritage pages. Instead, hyper-local and process issues dominate controversies on Wikipedia. We describe how this kind of research, drawing on Big Data and data science methods, contributes to digital heritage studies and also reveals its limitations.
In: Evolutionary human sciences, Band 4
ISSN: 2513-843X
Abstract
The year 2021 marked the fiftieth anniversary of the publication of Robert C. Dunnell's (Free Press, 1971) diminutive yet dense Systematics in prehistory. At the height of the debate between Culture History and New Archaeology, Dunnell's work sought to address a more fundamental issue that was and still is relevant to all branches of prehistoric archaeology, and especially to the study of the Palaeolithic: systematics. Dunnell himself was notorious and controversial, but the importance of his work remains underappreciated. Like other precocious works of that tumultuous time, Systematics in prehistory today remains absent from most course reading lists and gathers dust on library shelves. In this contribution we argue for a greater appreciation of its as yet unfulfilled conceptual and analytical promise. In particular, we briefly chart its somewhat delayed impact via evolutionary archaeology, including how it has also influenced non-Anglophone traditions, especially in South America. The obstinate persistence of classification issues in palaeoanthropology and palaeoarchaeology, we argue, warrants a second look at Dunnell's Systematics.
The workshop reported here was sponsored primarily by the European Research Council (ERC) project CLIOARCH, under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program (grant agreement No. 817564). In addition, the support of the Aarhus University Research Foundation (#AUFF-E-2019-FLS-1-25) and the warm welcome by the Sandbjerg Manor staff are gratefully acknowledged.
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