HS2350: The History of Archaeological Thought

School Archaeology
Department Code SHARE
Module Code HS2350
External Subject Code F420
Number of Credits 20
Level L6
Language of Delivery English
Module Leader Professor Anthony Whitley
Semester Double Semester
Academic Year 2017/8

Outline Description of Module

History of Archaeological Thought introduces students to the development of archaeology as a discipline that critically interprets the materials of the past. In showing the broad outlines of how the subject has developed, mainly but not exclusively within the last 40 or so years, it demonstrates the central role of theory in trying to make sense of the past, and in coming to terms with our own starting point in the present. This module will help you to use your knowledge of period and other modules to inform your reading and writing about theory and interpretation, and vice versa. It will cover the history of archaeology from the earlier part of the twentieth century onwards, concentrating on developments from 1960 to the present. It will look first at the grand narrative of the development of thought in prehistory, and then turn to the rather different histories of ‘historical’ archaeologies (Classical and Medieval). 

On completion of the module a student should be able to

 (1) A broad understanding of the development of the subject (archaeology), and the various traditions of interpretation which it encompasses;

(2) A more specific understanding of the major themes in the recent development of archaeological thought, and of major internal debates and external influences;

(3) An understanding of current issues in archaeological theory, and of the major terms used in such debates (e.g  processual, post-processual, ontology);

(4) An ability to place debates and theories in their proper historical context;

(5) An ability to tease out the theoretical assumptions in works that are not explicitly ‘theoretical’.

 

How the module will be delivered

The module will be delivered by twenty one-hour lectures, two seminars and one field trip (to Oxford). It begins with the standard account of the development of thought in prehistoric archaeology and then moves on to the rather different histories of ‘historical’ archaeologies. The seminars and museum visits are   are designed to address the other skills which this module is designed to foster (namely an ability to ‘read’ the implicit narratives of museum displays, and an ability to summarise the arguments of authors you may not be entirely sympathetic with). Students will also get the chance to obtain written and verbal feedback on their work.  

Skills that will be practised and developed

Skills that will be practised include the following: the evauluation of  theoretical claims in relation to case studies; an ability to summarise the arguments of authors whose stance you may not find agree with; an ability to relate theory to the description (and reception) of objects; and an ability to tease out the theoretical assumptions behind museum displays (achieved through writing object biographies, and visits to museums which have very different underlying principles i.e. the Pitt Rivers and the Ashmolean). 

How the module will be assessed

This module will be assessed via one essay (50%) one book precis (25%) and one object biography (25%).

The opportunity for reassessment in this module

Students will have the opportunity to re-submit any element of the assessed (précis, object biography or essay) they may have either failed or failed to submit in the first place. Such work can only gain a maximum mark of 40% however, and such calculations will form part of the overall mark for the course. 

 

Assessment Breakdown

Type % Title Duration(hrs)
Written Assessment 25 1000 Word Precis N/A
Written Assessment 25 1000 Word Object Biography N/A
Written Assessment 50 2000 Word Essay N/A

Syllabus content

The first semester will cover the history of archaeology from the beginning of the twentieth century to the present day, concentrating first on how thought in prehistory has developed. Terms such as processual, post-processual and interpretive will be explained The spring semester will be devoted to various forms of historical archaeology and to different national traditions (e.g. the German). It will take a close look at some but not all topics of current interest such as agency, personhood, materiality (this focus will change as the subject itself changes

Essential Reading and Resource List

Appadurai, A. (ed) 1986. The Social Life of Things: Commodities in Cultural Perspective. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (chapters by Appadurai and Kopytoff).

Gosden, C and Marshall, Y. 1999.  The cultural biography of objects. World Archaeology 31,169-78.

Hodder, I 1986. Reading the past. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. (1st edition, or any subsequent edition)

Johnson, M 2010. Archaeological theory: An Introduction (2nd edition). Oxford and Malden MA: Wiley-Blackwell.

Parker-Pearson, M.  2003 The Archaeology of Death and Burial (2nd edition, 1st edition 1999). Stroud: Sutton.

Shanks, M. and Tilley, C. 1987. Social Theory and Archaeology. Cambridge: Polity.

Tilley, C. 1994. A Phenemenology of Landscape. Oxford: Berg.

Renfrew, C. and Bahn, P. 2008. Archaeology: Theories, Methods and Practice (5th edition, or any later edition). London: Thames and Hudson.

Trigger, B 2006. A history of archaeological thought. (2nd edition, first edition 1989). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

 

Background Reading and Resource List

 

Available at: http://web.prm.ox.ac.uk/rpr/index.php/objectbiographies/

 

World Archaeology at the Pitt Rivers Museum: a characterization

 

Available at: http://www.prm.ox.ac.uk/world.htmlA History of the World in 100 Objects (podcasts)

Available at: http://www.bbc.co.uk/podcasts/series/ahow/all

 

Archaeology at the BBC - Wheeler; Piggott; Daniels; Childe; Atkinson et al. in action (vodcasts)

Available at: http://www.bbc.co.uk/bbcfour/collections/p018818x/archaeology-at-the-bbc

 


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