Communities and knowledge production in archaeology

Editors:
Julia Roberts
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Kathleen Sheppard
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Ulf R. Hansson
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Jonathan R. Trigg
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The dynamic processes of knowledge production in archaeology and elsewhere in the humanities and social sciences are increasingly viewed within the context of negotiation, cooperation and exchange, as the collaborative effort of groups, clusters and communities of scholars. Shifting focus from the individual scholar to the wider social contexts of her work, this volume investigates the importance of informal networks and conversation in the creation of knowledge about the past, and takes a closer look at the dynamic interaction and exchange that takes place between individuals, groups and clusters of scholars in the wider social settings of scientific work. Various aspects of and mechanisms at work behind the interaction and exchange that takes place between the individual scholar and her community, and the creative processes that such encounters trigger, are critically examined in eleven chapters which draw on a wide spectrum of examples from Europe and North America: from early modern antiquarians to archaeological societies and practitioners at work during the formative years of the modern archaeological disciplines and more recent examples from the twentieth century. The individual chapters engage with theoretical approaches to scientific creativity, knowledge production and interaction such as sociology and geographies of science, and actor-network theory (ANT) in their examination of individual–collective interplay. The book caters to readers both from within and outside the archaeological disciplines; primarily intended for researchers, teachers and students in archaeology, anthropology, classics and the history of science, it will also be of interest to the general reader.

Introduction
Introduction
Chapter 1: How archaeological communities think
Chapter 1: How archaeological communities think
Chapter 2: Circular 316
Chapter 2: Circular 316
Chapter 3: ‘More for beauty than for rarity’
Chapter 3: ‘More for beauty than for rarity’
Chapter 4: Digging dilettanti
Chapter 4: Digging dilettanti
Chapter 5: A romance and a tragedy
Chapter 5: A romance and a tragedy
Chapter 6: Geographies of networks and knowledge production
Chapter 6: Geographies of networks and knowledge production
Chapter 7: ‘More feared than loved’
Chapter 7: ‘More feared than loved’
Chapter 8: When the modern was too new
Chapter 8: When the modern was too new
Chapter 9: ‘Trying desperately to make myself an Egyptologist’
Chapter 9: ‘Trying desperately to make myself an Egyptologist’
Chapter 10: Frontier gentlemen’s club
Chapter 10: Frontier gentlemen’s club
Chapter 11: Re-examining the contribution of Dr Robert Toope to knowledge in later seventeenth-century Britain
Chapter 11: Re-examining the contribution of Dr Robert Toope to knowledge in later seventeenth-century Britain
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