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引用次数: 0
摘要
近年来,考古尸体和他们的痛苦成倍增加,研究他们的专家也成倍增加。结果是一连串的数据,其中大部分难以调和。我认为,疾病的可变制定,而不是反映认识论上的脱节或尺度上的差异,产生了本体论上的差距。为了探究这些具有可塑性的问题,我追溯了曼哈顿春街长老会教堂(Spring Street Presbyterian Church)墓地(1820-1850)“癌症”的扩散。为了探索将许多事物合二为一所涉及的斗争,我在专家的实验室、档案记录和写作过程中考虑了这种“疾病”的突现多样性。我没有强迫这些不同的癌症凝聚在一起,也没有根据学科领域(科学/人文)或物质层次(骨/纸)让一个“赢”,而是依靠stenger(2018)的部分联系生态。结果不是获得知识的标题,而是一路走来身体不断增加的经验教训的速写本。
Sketchbook archaeology: Bodies multiple and the archives they create
Archaeological bodies and their afflictions have multiplied in recent years, along with the specialists who study them. The result is a cascade of data, much of it difficult to reconcile. I argue that variable enactments of disease, rather than reflecting an epistemological disconnect or difference in scale, engender ontological gaps. To pursue these malleable matters, I trace the proliferation of “cancer” from the Spring Street Presbyterian Church burial vaults (1820–1850) in Manhattan. To explore the struggles involved in making many things one, I consider emergent multiplicities of this “disease” within specialists’ laboratories, archival records, and the writing process. Rather than force these different cancers to cohere, or make one “win” based on disciplinary domain (science/humanities) or hierarchy of substance (bone/paper), I rely on Stengers’s (2018) ecology of partial connects. The outcome is not a rubric of knowledge gained, but a sketchbook of lessons learned with bodies multiple along the way.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Social Archaeology is a fully peer reviewed international journal that promotes interdisciplinary research focused on social approaches in archaeology, opening up new debates and areas of exploration. It engages with and contributes to theoretical developments from other related disciplines such as feminism, queer theory, postcolonialism, social geography, literary theory, politics, anthropology, cognitive studies and behavioural science. It is explicitly global in outlook with temporal parameters from prehistory to recent periods. As well as promoting innovative social interpretations of the past, it also encourages an exploration of contemporary politics and heritage issues.