ABSTRACT

Over the last thirty years issues of culture, identity and meaning have moved out of the academic sphere to become central to politics and society at all levels from the local to the global. Archaeology has been at the forefront of these moves towards a greater engagement with the non-academic world, often in an extremely practical and direct way, for example in the disputes about the repatriation of human burials. Such disputes have been central to the recognition that previously marginalized groups have rights in their own past that are important for their future. The essays in this book look back at some of the most important events where a role for an archaeology concerned with the past in the present first emerged and look forward to the practical and theoretical issues now central to a socially engaged discipline and shaping its future. This book is published in honor of Professor Peter Ucko, who has played an unparalleled role in promoting awareness of the core issues in this volume among archaeologists.

chapter 1|6 pages

Introduction

chapter 3|13 pages

Eaglehawk and Crow

chapter 6|6 pages

Archaeological Overthrows

The 1980s Seen Through the Rear Window

chapter 8|9 pages

The World Heritage Convention

Management By and For Whom?

chapter 12|20 pages

‘They Made it A Living Thing Didn't They …'

The Growth of Things and the Fossilisation of Heritage

chapter 13|16 pages

The Archaeology of Local Myths and Heritage Tourism

The Case of Cane River's Melrose Plantation

chapter 14|13 pages

Practising Archaeology in Eastern and Southern Africa

Coming of Age or the Indigenisation of a Foreign Subject?

chapter 18|17 pages

Figurines in Action

Methods and Theories in Figurine Research

chapter 19|11 pages

Objects of the Past

Refocusing Archaeology

chapter 20|16 pages

Central European Archaeology at the Crossroads

‘One World Archaeology' in Practice?