I have done historical research for archaeologists for a long time
(though I am also a trained archaeologist). The one thing I can normally
guarantee is that I normally fail to answer all of the long list of the
questions archaeologists ask me at the first meeting. However, despite
this I have usually radically reinterpreted several aspects the site for
them by the end of the project. Anyway back to my Quebec paper.
In message <v01540b01b44f8edde443@[207.228.62.131]>, Morgan Blanchard
<[log in to unmask]> writes
>Jake:
> I thought it was interesting that in your treatment of history's role
>in historic archaeology, you left out the most interesting question, "why".
>(why is it here? Why was it abandoned? Why did they build out of this? Why
>did they build in this stile? Why are there no feminine artifacts
>here?...ad infinitum) After all, the answer to the question "why" is what
>fills up the vast majority of both historical an archaeological works.
>The question might be covered loosely in your historical background section
>but I think it needs to be handled more overtly. Admittedly this takes the
>historical archaeologist into unfamiliar territory, but I think we need to
>do our best to create an emic understanding of our sites and the best tool
>for doing this is the historical record.
>
>Morgan Blanchard
>
>> But for hist.arch., historical research does, generall, three things
>> for us: 1) the overview, or historical background, the broad context
>> in which we think a site originated and was used; 2) site history, and
>> ethnographic and material culture info from the records -- how life
>> was lived at the site, and what was used there, or at one very like
>> it; and 3) structural history, using the documents to tell us what was
>> built at a site, and where, and when, and how it was changed.
Paul Courtney
Leicester UK
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