INDIGENOUS ARCHAEOLOGY AS COMPLEMENT TO, NOT SEPARATE FROM, SCIENTIFIC ARCHAEOLOGY Indigenous archaeology as complement to, not separate from, scientific archaeology

dc.creator Watkins, Joe
dc.date 2011-12-15
dc.date.accessioned 2023-09-27T15:08:49Z
dc.date.available 2023-09-27T15:08:49Z
dc.description Defining Indigenous Archaeology is as difficult as defining “Indigenous”. In some areas the term “Indigenous” is applied to people who existed in an area prior to colonization (“Geography”); in other areas it is applied to people who are related to those people whose ancestors created the culture being studied (“Descendancy”); in others it is applied to the community of people who live in the area where the archaeology is being conducted (“Proximity”). This paper recognizes that Indigenous Archaeology, however defined, has characteristics that add to the scientific study of the human past; that Indigenous Archaeology is not meant to supplant scientific archaeology but to add to archaeology’s interpretative powers. In this paper I will provide an overview of Indigenous Archaeology, examine some of the problems in trying to discuss its many facets as a single disciplinary approach to the interpretation of the past, and then close with an examination of the possibilities inherent in the generalized approach to the study of the past by partnering with communities and organizations. en-US
dc.description Defining Indigenous Archaeology is as difficult as defining “Indigenous”. In some areas the term “Indigenous” is applied to people who existed in an area prior to colonization (“Geography”); in other areas it is applied to people who are to those people whose ancestors created the culture being (“Descendancy”); in others it is applied to the community of people who live in the area where the archaeology is being conducted (“Proximity”). This paper recognizes that Archaeology, however defined, has characteristics that add to the scientific study of the human past; that Indigenous Archaeology is not meant to supplant scientific archaeology but to add to archaeology’s powers. In this paper I will provide an overview of Indigenous Archaeology, examine some of the in trying to discuss its many facets as a single disciplinary approach to the of the past, and then close with an examination of the in the generalized approach to the study of the past by partnering with communities and organizations. es-ES
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dc.description.provenance Item created via OAI harvest from source: https://revistas.unimagdalena.edu.co/index.php/jangwapana/oai on 2023-09-27T15:08:49Z (GMT). Item's OAI Record identifier: oai:ojs.investigacion.unimagdalena.edu.co:article/64 en
dc.format application/pdf
dc.identifier https://revistas.unimagdalena.edu.co/index.php/jangwapana/article/view/64
dc.identifier 10.21676/16574923.64
dc.identifier.uri https://repositorio.unimagdalena.edu.co/handle/123456789/13966
dc.language spa
dc.publisher Universidad del Magdalena es-ES
dc.relation https://revistas.unimagdalena.edu.co/index.php/jangwapana/article/view/64/59
dc.source Jangwa Pana; Vol. 10 No. 1 (2011): Journal Jangwa Pana (January-December); 46 - 62 en-US
dc.source Jangwa Pana; Vol. 10 Núm. 1 (2011): Revista Jangwa Pana (enero-diciembre); 46 - 62 es-ES
dc.source 2389-7872
dc.source 1657-4923
dc.subject Arqueologia indigena es-ES
dc.subject arqueologia cientifica es-ES
dc.subject comunidades indigenas es-ES
dc.subject Indigenous archaeology en-US
dc.subject scientific archaeology en-US
dc.subject indigenous communities en-US
dc.title INDIGENOUS ARCHAEOLOGY AS COMPLEMENT TO, NOT SEPARATE FROM, SCIENTIFIC ARCHAEOLOGY en-US
dc.title Indigenous archaeology as complement to, not separate from, scientific archaeology es-ES
dc.type info:eu-repo/semantics/article
dc.type info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
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