Degrowth in development-led archaeology and opportunities for change. A comment on Zorzin

IF 1.4 1区 历史学 0 ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeological Dialogues Pub Date : 2021-06-01 DOI:10.1017/S1380203821000040
Sadie Watson
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Abstract

Zorzin’s paper offers compelling discussion surrounding the various issues that face the practice of archaeology today. I would like to take some aspects of his paper and dive deeper into the implications for myself and my colleagues working within development-led archaeology in the UK and elsewhere. My own career has not been framed within a theoretical or academic sphere so my opinions about this topic will be accordingly pragmatic – although like many, I alternate between desiring a complete destruction of the existing structures within which I have been forced to operate and taking a more measured consideration of how to approach the revolutionizing of those current structures, which (currently anyway) seem intractable. My knowledge of degrowth as a concept has been expanded by Zorzin’s paper, which provides a coherent and relevant introduction to the subject. Ironically, as a post-doctoral researcher without a university account, I am not able to refer to the list of references in Flexner or Zorzin’s papers, so foundmyself on the back foot slightly, although entering fully into the competitive and expensive world of academic publishing is not an attractive proposition inmany ways, and like others I would prefer open access of everything, for everybody. First, I have to confess to some personal disquiet about the concept of degrowth when my own livelihood and capacity to care for my family (rent, food, school uniforms) have depended entirely on a salary from development-led archaeology and I am therefore an established participant in the neo-liberalism Zorzin describes. I was also a senior member of the field team described in Zorzin (2016b), although I did not work on the specific project he discusses in that paper. I have some issues with Zorzin’s (2016b) approach to participant observation, which was undertaken without informing some of the participants, and also with the publication of clearly identifiable photographs of the site team and project. The concluding remarks about sabotaging the project are unnecessarily provocative, in my opinion; this would merely increase pressure on the supervisory staff, which is hardly in the spirit of solidarity. I agree with most of the rest of the content, (particularly the idea that we have been instrumentalized by developers), bar the idea that early professional archaeology was somehow a ‘better environment’, given that it developed within a conservative class-based patriarchy. I should also confront the reality that, despite my efforts at activism (union activity, lobbying our professional body and other organizations), there have been few significant improvements in the living and working conditions of archaeologists over recent years and the profession of archaeology remains exclusionary and predominantly open only to those who have come from a white, abled, economically secure background. Here my own position as one of those woolly liberals who is wholly embedded in capitalist structures is clear; I reluctantly nailed my colours to that mast when I committed to work on road schemes rather than protest against them back in the mid-1990s.1 I have operated as an archaeologist within the rules and time frames of the construction industry ever since and fully accept Zorzin’s critique that my adherence to the structures means I have bought into the idea that working within them is my sole option. With these various caveats out of the way, certainly have no argument with Flexner’s statement that there is something wrong with capitalism (Flexner 2020, 159), but I would take issue with the
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发展的衰退引领了考古学和变革的机遇。佐尔津评论
佐尔津的论文围绕当今考古学实践中面临的各种问题进行了令人信服的讨论。我想从他的论文的某些方面深入探讨这对我自己和我在英国和其他地方从事发展主导考古工作的同事的影响。我自己的职业生涯并不是在理论或学术领域内构建的,因此我对这个话题的看法将相应地务实——尽管和许多人一样,我在渴望彻底摧毁我被迫运作的现有结构和更慎重地考虑如何对这些现有结构进行革命性改革之间摇摆不定,这(目前看来)似乎很棘手。Zorzin的论文扩展了我对退化这一概念的认识,对这一主题进行了连贯和相关的介绍。具有讽刺意味的是,作为一名没有大学账户的博士后研究员,我无法参考Flexner或Zorzin论文中的参考文献列表,因此我发现自己有点落后,尽管完全进入竞争激烈且昂贵的学术出版世界在很多方面都不是一个有吸引力的提议,而且和其他人一样,我更喜欢开放获取一切,为每个人。首先,我必须承认,当我自己的生计和照顾家人的能力(房租、食物、校服)完全依赖于发展主导的考古学的薪水时,我个人对衰退的概念感到不安,因此我是佐津所描述的新自由主义的坚定参与者。我也是Zorzin(2016b)中描述的现场团队的高级成员,尽管我没有参与他在该论文中讨论的具体项目。我对Zorzin(2016b)的参与者观察方法有一些问题,该方法是在没有通知一些参与者的情况下进行的,也对现场团队和项目的清晰可识别照片的发布有一些问题。在我看来,关于破坏该项目的结论性言论是不必要的挑衅;这只会增加监管人员的压力,这很难符合团结一致的精神。我同意其余大部分内容(尤其是我们被开发人员工具化的想法),除了早期专业考古在某种程度上是一个“更好的环境”的想法之外,因为它是在保守的基于阶级的父权制中发展起来的。我还应该面对这样一个现实,即尽管我努力开展活动(工会活动、游说我们的专业机构和其他组织),但近年来考古学家的生活和工作条件几乎没有显著改善,考古行业仍然是排斥性的,主要只对那些来自白人、有能力、,经济安全背景。在这里,我作为一个完全嵌入资本主义结构的模糊自由主义者的立场是明确的;早在20世纪90年代中期,当我致力于道路规划而不是抗议时,我就不情愿地把自己的立场钉在了桅杆上。1从那以后,我一直在建筑行业的规则和时间框架内从事考古学家的工作,并完全接受佐津的批评,即我对这些结构的坚持意味着我接受了这样一种想法,即在这些结构中工作是我唯一的选择选项有了这些不同的警告,我当然不同意Flexner关于资本主义有问题的说法(Flexner 2020159),但我对
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
5.60%
发文量
25
期刊介绍: Archaeology is undergoing rapid changes in terms of its conceptual framework and its place in contemporary society. In this challenging intellectual climate, Archaeological Dialogues has become one of the leading journals for debating innovative issues in archaeology. Firmly rooted in European archaeology, it now serves the international academic community for discussing the theories and practices of archaeology today. True to its name, debate takes a central place in Archaeological Dialogues.
期刊最新文献
How far does culture go? A study on creative object biographies. Can creative arts be a medium for understanding object–human interaction? Narratives of inequality. Towards an archaeology of structural violence in Late Iron Age Scandinavia Finding the fun: Towards a playful archaeology Archaeologists just wanna have fun
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