ABSTRACT

They are essential to every major archaeological excavation but rarely acknowledged by the visiting researchers once the artifacts have been shipped. As part of the innovative, multivocal output from the famous Turkish Neolithic site of Çatalhöyük, we hear from one of the site guards, Sadrettin Dural, who tells the story of the excavation from the point of view of the “Other.” He offers tales of the strange habits of archaeologists, describes the local in-fighting that scholars never see, and explains how scientists can be protected from the Yatirs, spirits of the dead who guard the mound. Ian Hodder, director of the Çatalhöyük project, provides explanatory notes for the reader and an interview with the author, exploring indigenous interpretations of ancient sites and the archaeologists who excavate them. For the archaeologist, this offers a revolutionary new viewpoint on their work. For the cultural anthropologist, Dural’s role as site guard is only a small part of his life as a Turkish villager. The author recounts the daily lived experience of one man in a contemporary Turkish village, including changing economic strategies for supporting his family, brushes with the law, trips to the beach and the city, and Turkish phone sex.

chapter 1|9 pages

Beginning my new job at Çatalhöyük

chapter 2|5 pages

Excavations begin– The team settles in

chapter 3|12 pages

My routine as a guard

chapter 5|4 pages

I build the Çatalhöyük cafe

chapter 6|6 pages

Dealing with more visitors and foreigners

chapter 7|5 pages

Some less happy memories

chapter 8|4 pages

The past and the present

chapter 9|6 pages

Dealing with each other

chapter 10|8 pages

Doing the right thing

chapter 11|4 pages

More about Çatalhöyük

chapter 12|4 pages

Some erotic moments

chapter 13|7 pages

Financial dealings

chapter 15|3 pages

They stroke the soil with love

chapter 16|7 pages

Things start to go wrong

chapter 17|20 pages

The situation worsens

chapter 18|2 pages

Reaching the end