Archaeologia Polona Vol. 44 (2006)
Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology Polish Academy of Sciences
The paper aims to outline the most crucial elements of archaeological practice in the period of disappearance of monolithic research agendas in prehistoric archaeology. They need to be identified and conceptualized in a highly heterogeneous and idiosyncratic process of collating/combining the entire heuristic potential of individual elements of material culture that constitute an assemblage. In particular, the nature of reasoning processes and strategies of justification is debated to provide the foundations of archaeology as a rigorous discipline able to produce convincing accounts of the past
Biehl, P. F., A. Gramsch and A. Marciniak. 2002. Introduction. In Archaeologies of Europe. History, methods and theories. P. Biehl, A. Gramsch and A. Marciniak (eds), 25—31. Tübingen
Binford, L.R. 1981. Bones. Ancient men and modern myths. New York
Bernstein, R.J. 1983. Beyond objectivism and relativism. Science, hermeneutics, and praxis. Philadelphia
Conee, E. 2005. Contextualism contested. In Contemporary debates in epistemology. M. Steup and E. Sosa (eds), 47-55. Oxford
Hodder, I. 1991. Interpretive archaeology and its role. American Antiquity 56(1): 7—18
Hodder, I. 1999. The archaeological process. An introduction. Oxford—Malden
Johnson, M. 2006. On the nature of theoretical archaeology and archaeological theory. Archaeological Dialogues 13(2): 117-32
Marciniak, A. 1999. Faunal materials and interpretive archaeology — epistemology reconsidered. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 6: 293—320
Shanks, M. and C. Tilley. 1987. Re-constructing archaeology. Theory and practice. Cambridge
Wylie, A. 2002a. Introduction. Philosophy from the ground up. In Thinking from things. Essays in the philosophy of archaeology. A. Wylie (ed.), 1—24. Berkeley—Los Angeles—London
Wylie, A. 2002b. The interpretive dilemma. In Thinking from things. Essays in the philosophy of archaeology. A. Wylie (ed.), 117—26. Berkeley—Los Angeles—London
Wylie, A. 2002c. Archaeological cables and tacking. Beyond objectivism and relativism. In Thinking from things. Essays in the philosophy of archaeology. A. Wylie (ed.), 161—7. Berkeley—Los Angeles—London
Wylie, A. 2002d. 'Heavily decomposing red herrings'. Middle ground in the anti-/postprocessual wars. In Thinking from things. Essays in the philosophy of archaeology. A. Wylie (ed.), 171—8. Berkeley—Los Angeles—London
Wylie, A. 2002e. Rethinking unity as a 'working hypothesis' for philosophy of science. How archaeologies exploit the disunities of science. In Thinking from things. Essays in the philosophy of archaeology. A. Wylie (ed.), 200—10. Berkeley—Los Angeles—London
Yoffee, N. and A. Sherratt. 1993. Introduction. The sources of archaeological theory. In Archaeological theory. Who sets the agenda? N. Yoffee and A. Sherratt (eds), 1—9. Cambridge
IAiE PAN, call no. P 357 ; IAiE PAN, call no. P 358 ; IAiE PAN, call no. P 356 ; click here to follow the link
Copyright-protected material. May be used within the limits of statutory user freedoms
Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology of the Polish Academy of Sciences
Library of the Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology of the Polish Academy of Sciences
Mar 3, 2023
https://rcin.org.pl./publication/77332
Edition name | Date |
---|