Volume 31 • Issue 2 • 2007
La consultation et le téléchargement des textes intégraux sont limités aux membres de l’ACA. Abonnez-vous dès aujourd’hui à l’ACA et vous bénéficierez de ces avantages et plusieurs autres. L'ACA vous offre pendant un temps limité:

|
RÉSUMÉ
PDF
|
More than Meets the Eye: Reconsidering Variability in Iroquoian Ceramics – Kostalena Michelaki |
|
|
RÉSUMÉ
PDF |
Enculturing an Unknown World: Caches and Clovis Landscape Ideology – Jason D. Gillespie |
|
|
RÉSUMÉ
PDF |
Coast Salish Interaction: A View from the Inlets– Dana Lepofsky, Teresa Trost, and Jesse Morin |
|
|
RÉSUMÉ
PDF |
Pre-Dorset Technological Organization and Land Use in Southwestern Hudson Bay – Jacob M. Anderson and Lisa M. Hodgetts |
HAUT |
| PDF |
Social Archaeology of Funerary Remains (Rebecca Gowland and Christopher Knüsel, editors) – reviewed by Aubrey Cannon |
|
| PDF |
The Archaeology of Identities: A Reader (Timothy Insoll, editor) – reviewed by Jerimy J. Cunningham |
|
| PDF |
Geographical Information Systems in Archaeology (James Conolly and Mark Lake)
– reviewed by David Ebert |
|
| PDF |
Introduction to Rock Art Research (David S. Whitley) – reviewed by Daniel Gendron |
HAUT |
| PDF |
Remote Sensing in Archaeology: An Explicitly North American Perspective (Jay K. Johnson, editor) – reviewed by Jason Jeandron |
|
| PDF |
Doing Archaeology: A Cultural Resource Management Perspective ((Thomas F. King) – reviewed by Dean H. Knight |
|
| PDF |
The Archaeology of Class in Urban America (Stephen A. Mrozowski) – reviewed by Laurie Milne |
|
| PDF |
Appropriated Pasts: Indigenous Peoples and the Colonial Culture of Archaeology (Ian J. McNiven and Lynette Russell) – reviewed by George P. Nicholas |
HAUT |
| PDF |
The Evolution of Modern Humans in Africa: A Comprehensive Guide (Pamela R. Willoughby) – reviewed by Susan Pfeiffer |
|
| PDF |
The Goddess and the Bull; Çatalhöyük: An Archaeological Journey to the Dawn of Civilization (Michael Balter) – reviewed by Rick Schulting |
|
| PDF |
From the Arctic to Avalon: Papers in Honour of Jim Tuck (Lisa Rankin and Peter Ramsden, editors) – reviewed by Arthur E. Spiess |
|
| PDF |
The St. Lawrence Iroquoians: Corn People (Roland Temblay) – reviewed by Gary Warrick |
|
| PDF |
Ideas of Landscape (Matthew Johnson) – reviewed by Michael C. Wilson |
|
| PDF |
Inconstant Companions: Archaeology and North American Indian Oral Traditions (Ronald J. Mason) – reviewed by Eldon Yellowhorn |
HAUT |
|
Editor’s Notes: On archaeology and the “burden” of responsibility
George P. Nicholas
“He thought we cared too much about the past, a kind of national nostalgia, and that it stopped us from coping with the problems of the present.” —P.D. James, The Murder Room, 2003.
The 1960s and 1970s constituted a period of upheaval and transformation in archaeology and one that lead to a reformulation of the archaeological agenda in the guise of the New Archaeology.1 In some respects, the discipline underwent more of a change during these two decades than it had during all of its earlier history. One of the key goals was to make archaeology more scientific, more objective than it had been practiced earlier in the century.PDF |