Current Archaeological practice in Southeast Asia: Collaboration, engagement, and community involvement in field research in Southeast Asia

Stephen B. Acabado
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Archaeological practice in Southeast Asia has recently shifted to active engagement with local stakeholders. This is due to the realization that involving communities results in meaningful research outcomes. A growing number of investigations are actively seeking the involvement of communities as both contributors and as active and involved research participants. These undertakings humanize our community partners and counter the exclusivity often associated with scholarly authority. An increasing number of scholars approach research as inter-disciplinary, breaking state and ethnic boundaries and engaging communities, emphasizing that we no longer work alone. This special issue of the Journal of Community Archaeology and Heritage provides examples of this trend. It is predicated on the concepts of practice and agency and their impacts on cultural heritage in Southeast Asia. As every article in this issue focuses on communities drastically transformed by colonialism, we hope it will illustrate how archaeological and heritage scholars can empower indigenous and descendant communities through heritage conservation. We focus on the concept of cultural heritage here since it encompasses and transcends disciplinary boundaries. It also has its origin in Western scholarship, and thus, has colonial connotations in post-colonial Southeast Asia. It is also important in identity formation, nation building, and empowerment. Although there is no all-encompassing definition that catches its magnitude, heritage unifies an interdisciplinary study and practice that focuses on the perceived importance of cultural or historical phenomena. As Smith (2006, 83) puts it, heritage is an intangible process replete with cultural and social values. In other words, heritage goes through a process of negotiation based on each community’s experience. Therefore, it becomes important to those who have a shared history, experience, and memory. Intrinsic in the concept of heritage is the idea of community. There can be no heritage if there is no group composed of multiple individuals who own history or a building or an artifact. Heritage has different levels of meaning to different groups and it is also a cultural product (Lowenthal 1985; 1996). In the social sciences, the term heritage invokes our relationship with the past. It also provides a paradigm to link present-day identities to historical narratives. As such, the term becomes a powerful political tool that can be used for either inclusivity or exclusivity in nation-building (Tunbridge and Ashworth 1996; Shoocongdej 2007). Indeed, heritage has been used to call for unity among peoples with similar historical experiences (Stark and Griffin 2004; Glover 2006; Majid 2007; Shoocongdej 2007).
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当前东南亚考古实践:东南亚实地研究的合作、参与和社区参与
东南亚的考古实践最近已转向与当地利益相关者的积极接触。这是因为认识到让社区参与会产生有意义的研究成果。越来越多的调查正在积极寻求社区作为贡献者和积极参与的研究参与者的参与。这些事业使我们的社区合作伙伴人性化,并对抗通常与学术权威相关的排他性。越来越多的学者将研究视为跨学科的,打破国家和种族界限,让社区参与进来,强调我们不再单独工作。《社区考古与遗产杂志》的这期特刊提供了这一趋势的例子。它基于实践和代理的概念及其对东南亚文化遗产的影响。本期的每一篇文章都聚焦于被殖民主义彻底改变的社区,我们希望它能说明考古和遗产学者如何通过遗产保护赋予土著和后裔社区权力。我们在这里关注文化遗产的概念,因为它包含并超越了学科界限。它也起源于西方学术,因此在后殖民时代的东南亚具有殖民主义的含义。它在身份形成、国家建设和赋权方面也很重要。尽管没有包罗万象的定义来捕捉其重要性,但遗产将跨学科的研究和实践结合在一起,重点关注文化或历史现象的重要性。正如Smith(200683)所言,遗产是一个充满文化和社会价值的非物质过程。换言之,遗产要经过一个基于每个社区经验的谈判过程。因此,对于那些拥有共同历史、经验和记忆的人来说,这一点变得很重要。遗产概念的内在内涵是社区理念。如果没有由拥有历史、建筑或文物的多个人组成的群体,就不可能有遗产。遗产对不同群体有不同程度的意义,也是一种文化产品(Lowenthal 1985;1996)。在社会科学中,“遗产”一词唤起了我们与过去的关系。它还提供了一种将当今身份与历史叙事联系起来的范式。因此,这个词成为了一个强大的政治工具,可以用于国家建设中的包容性或排他性(Tunbridge和Ashworth,1996年;Shoocongdej,2007年)。事实上,遗产被用来呼吁具有类似历史经历的民族团结一致(Stark和Griffin,2004年;Glover,2006年;Majid,2007年;Shoocongdej,2007年)。
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来源期刊
Journal of Community Archaeology and Heritage
Journal of Community Archaeology and Heritage Arts and Humanities-Archeology (arts and humanities)
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
22
期刊介绍: Journal of Community Archaeology & Heritage is a new journal intended for participants, volunteers, practitioners, and academics involved in the many projects and practices broadly defined as ‘community archaeology’. This is intended to include the excavation, management, stewardship or presentation of archaeological and heritage resources that include major elements of community participation, collaboration, or outreach. The journal recognises the growing interest in voluntary activism in archaeological research and interpretation, and seeks to create a platform for discussion about the efficacy and importance of such work as well as a showcase for the dissemination of community archaeology projects (which might offer models of best practice for others). By inviting papers relating to theory and practice from across the world, the journal seeks to demonstrate both the diversity of community archaeology and its commonalities in process and associated theory. We seek contributions from members of the voluntary sector as well as those involved in archaeological practice and academia.
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