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Från stadsarkeologi till urbanitetsarkeologi? Förslag till framtidsperspektiv

Thomasson, Joakim LU (2011) Lund Studies in Historical Archaeology 14. p.49-80
Abstract
When medieval archaeology was formed as an independent academic discipline at Lund University in the middle of the 1960s, town archaeology was a vital part representing one of the orders in feudal society. It was established as a recognizable discourse and a major arena for excavating medieval archaeology.

The article deals with the following issues: What kind of epistemological currents have influenced the way in which archaeology has been carried out? How have the remains been documented? How have the reports been structured? Which research areas have been of interest?

A decade after the emancipation of medieval archaeology, processual archaeology grew in importance. Archaeology was a part of public heritage... (More)
When medieval archaeology was formed as an independent academic discipline at Lund University in the middle of the 1960s, town archaeology was a vital part representing one of the orders in feudal society. It was established as a recognizable discourse and a major arena for excavating medieval archaeology.

The article deals with the following issues: What kind of epistemological currents have influenced the way in which archaeology has been carried out? How have the remains been documented? How have the reports been structured? Which research areas have been of interest?

A decade after the emancipation of medieval archaeology, processual archaeology grew in importance. Archaeology was a part of public heritage administration. Processes such as urbanization and production were in focus, and documentation and fieldwork were carried out with natural science as a role model. With post-modern influence, heritage became a contemporary issue, and with post-processual archaeology the view of the town as a phenomenon changed. Medieval archaeology is redefined as historical archaeology, method is vital instead of the epoch. Interpretation is favoured before neutral observations. The focus is upon wider time frames, urbanity is regarded as a part of landscapes and in global perspectives, and historiography is of interest as well as the urban cultural heritage. It is argued that this reflects a change towards an archaeology of urbanity. However, archaeology also has to develop a more interpretive contextual approach and incorporate the built heritage. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
alternative title
From town archaeology to an archaeology of urbanity? Suggestions on future perspectives
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
host publication
Medeltiden och arkeologin. Mer än sex decennier
editor
Hans, Andersson and Jes, Wienberg
volume
Lund Studies in Historical Archaeology 14
pages
49 - 80
ISSN
1653-1183
ISBN
978-91-89578-44-9
language
Swedish
LU publication?
yes
id
813f0fab-db48-4867-ae6f-2225588412c7 (old id 2338529)
date added to LUP
2016-04-04 09:05:41
date last changed
2018-11-21 20:50:43
@inbook{813f0fab-db48-4867-ae6f-2225588412c7,
  abstract     = {{When medieval archaeology was formed as an independent academic discipline at Lund University in the middle of the 1960s, town archaeology was a vital part representing one of the orders in feudal society. It was established as a recognizable discourse and a major arena for excavating medieval archaeology.<br/><br>
The article deals with the following issues: What kind of epistemological currents have influenced the way in which archaeology has been carried out? How have the remains been documented? How have the reports been structured? Which research areas have been of interest?<br/><br>
A decade after the emancipation of medieval archaeology, processual archaeology grew in importance. Archaeology was a part of public heritage administration. Processes such as urbanization and production were in focus, and documentation and fieldwork were carried out with natural science as a role model. With post-modern influence, heritage became a contemporary issue, and with post-processual archaeology the view of the town as a phenomenon changed. Medieval archaeology is redefined as historical archaeology, method is vital instead of the epoch. Interpretation is favoured before neutral observations. The focus is upon wider time frames, urbanity is regarded as a part of landscapes and in global perspectives, and historiography is of interest as well as the urban cultural heritage. It is argued that this reflects a change towards an archaeology of urbanity. However, archaeology also has to develop a more interpretive contextual approach and incorporate the built heritage.}},
  author       = {{Thomasson, Joakim}},
  booktitle    = {{Medeltiden och arkeologin. Mer än sex decennier}},
  editor       = {{Hans, Andersson and Jes, Wienberg}},
  isbn         = {{978-91-89578-44-9}},
  issn         = {{1653-1183}},
  language     = {{swe}},
  pages        = {{49--80}},
  title        = {{Från stadsarkeologi till urbanitetsarkeologi? Förslag till framtidsperspektiv}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/5229904/2338530.pdf}},
  volume       = {{Lund Studies in Historical Archaeology 14}},
  year         = {{2011}},
}