公共空间中的私人斗争

IF 0.6 0 ARCHAEOLOGY Journal of Contemporary Archaeology Pub Date : 2021-09-13 DOI:10.1558/jca.43379
Dante Angelo, Kelly Britt, M. Brown, Stacey L. Camp
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引用次数: 7

摘要

2019冠状病毒病大流行几乎扰乱了我们世界的方方面面,包括一些最基本的人类行为形式和我们的社会观念。日常活动现在对个人和整个社会构成了风险。我们生活方式的这种根本性转变在全球范围内产生了广泛的物质反应。这篇摄影文章旨在开启对话,并就作者利用考古和民族志方法在其社区中记录、目睹、记录和编目的多种形式的COVID-19物质性和改变的景观提出问题。这种材料包括粉笔艺术、涂鸦、彩绘岩石和标识,放置在项目作者社区的公共和私人空间中。在构建我们的问题时,我们借鉴了文化创伤研究、文化人类学和当代考古学领域的理论框架。
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Private Struggles in Public Spaces
The COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted nearly every facet of our world, including some of the most fundamental forms of human behavior and our conception of the social. Everyday activities now pose a risk to individuals and to society as a whole. This radical shift in how we live has produced a wide array of material responses across the globe. This photo essay seeks to open up dialogue and ask questions about the numerous forms of COVID-19 materiality and altered landscapes that the authors have chronicled, witnessed, documented and cataloged in their communities, using archaeological and ethnographic methods. This materiality includes chalk art, graffiti, painted rocks and signage placed in both public and private spaces within the project authors’ communities. In framing our questions, we draw upon theoretical frameworks in the fields of cultural trauma studies, cultural anthropology and contemporary archaeology.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
14
期刊介绍: The Journal of Contemporary Archaeology is the first dedicated, international, peer-reviewed journal to explore archaeology’s specific contribution to understanding the present and recent past. It is concerned both with archaeologies of the contemporary world, defined temporally as belonging to the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries, as well as with reflections on the socio-political implications of doing archaeology in the contemporary world. In addition to its focus on archaeology, JCA encourages articles from a range of adjacent disciplines which consider recent and contemporary material-cultural entanglements, including anthropology, art history, cultural studies, design studies, heritage studies, history, human geography, media studies, museum studies, psychology, science and technology studies and sociology. Acknowledging the key place which photography and digital media have come to occupy within this emerging subfield, JCA includes a regular photo essay feature and provides space for the publication of interactive, web-only content on its website.
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