After Captain Cook: The Archaeology of the Recent Indigenous Past in Australia
The original papers collected in this pioneering volume address the historical archaeology of Aboriginal Australia and its application in researching the shared history of Aboriginal and settler Australians. The authors draw on case studies from across the continent to show how archaeology can illuminate the continuum of responses by indigenous Australians to European settlement and colonization. Taking an innovative approach to the relationship between archaeological theory and contemporary Australian history, the book also examines the role of archaeology in current debates over Aboriginal land rights and the role of 'post-contact' archaeology in cultural heritage management. An introduction by the series editors places the Australian material in the context of indigenous archaeological studies worldwide. The volume will be of interest to academic and public archaeologists, indigenous people, anthropologists, historians, and heritage managers who deal with indigenous communities.
1111875146
After Captain Cook: The Archaeology of the Recent Indigenous Past in Australia
The original papers collected in this pioneering volume address the historical archaeology of Aboriginal Australia and its application in researching the shared history of Aboriginal and settler Australians. The authors draw on case studies from across the continent to show how archaeology can illuminate the continuum of responses by indigenous Australians to European settlement and colonization. Taking an innovative approach to the relationship between archaeological theory and contemporary Australian history, the book also examines the role of archaeology in current debates over Aboriginal land rights and the role of 'post-contact' archaeology in cultural heritage management. An introduction by the series editors places the Australian material in the context of indigenous archaeological studies worldwide. The volume will be of interest to academic and public archaeologists, indigenous people, anthropologists, historians, and heritage managers who deal with indigenous communities.
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After Captain Cook: The Archaeology of the Recent Indigenous Past in Australia

After Captain Cook: The Archaeology of the Recent Indigenous Past in Australia

After Captain Cook: The Archaeology of the Recent Indigenous Past in Australia

After Captain Cook: The Archaeology of the Recent Indigenous Past in Australia

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Overview

The original papers collected in this pioneering volume address the historical archaeology of Aboriginal Australia and its application in researching the shared history of Aboriginal and settler Australians. The authors draw on case studies from across the continent to show how archaeology can illuminate the continuum of responses by indigenous Australians to European settlement and colonization. Taking an innovative approach to the relationship between archaeological theory and contemporary Australian history, the book also examines the role of archaeology in current debates over Aboriginal land rights and the role of 'post-contact' archaeology in cultural heritage management. An introduction by the series editors places the Australian material in the context of indigenous archaeological studies worldwide. The volume will be of interest to academic and public archaeologists, indigenous people, anthropologists, historians, and heritage managers who deal with indigenous communities.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780759115798
Publisher: AltaMira Press
Publication date: 03/01/2004
Series: Indigenous Archaeologies Series , #2
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 248
File size: 14 MB
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About the Author

Rodney Harrison is a research fellow in the Centre for Cross Cultural Research at the Australian National University, Canberra. This book was largely prepared while he was employed in the cultural heritage research unit in the Department of Environment and Conservation (NSW) in Sydney. His research has focused on 'contact' archaeology, the historical archaeology of the pastoral industry in Australia, collaborative and community-based archaeologies, and the role of material culture in negotiating cross-cultural encounters. He holds a Ph.D. from the University of Western Australia. Christine Williamson holds a Ph.D. in archaeology from La Trobe University in Melbourne, Australia. Her research has focused on the nature of European and Aboriginal interactions on the colonial frontier in northwest Tasmania, and the role of long-term historical trajectories in structuring post-contact change. Her research interests include historical archaeology, Aboriginal/European contact, and the writing of Aboriginal history. She is currently self-employed as a heritage consultant in Melbourne.

Table of Contents


Chapter 1 Figures
Chapter 2 Tables
Chapter 3 Foreword
Chapter 4 1. Introduction: 'Too many Captain Cooks'? An archaeology of Aboriginal Australia after 1788
Chapter 5 RESEARCH ON THE ARCHAEOLOGY OF THE RECENT INDIGENOUS PAST IN AUSTRALIA
Chapter 6 2. The Mjöberg collection and contact period Aboriginal material culture from north-east Queensland's rainforest region
Chapter 7 3. Shared histories and the archaeology of the pastoral industry in Australia
Chapter 8 4. 'This civilising experiment': Photography at Coranderrk Aboriginal Station during the 1860s
Chapter 9 5. Finding meaning in the patterns: The analysis of material culture from a contact site in Tasmania
Chapter 10 NATIVE TITLE AND THE ARCHAEOLOGY OF THE RECENT ABORIGINAL PAST
Chapter 11 6. Legislating the past: Native title and the history of Aboriginal Australia
Chapter 12 7. Can archaeology be used to address the principle of exclusive possession in native title?
Chapter 13 CONTACT ARCHAEOLOGY AND HERITAGE MANAGEMENT
Chapter 14 8. An archaeology of attachment: Cultural heritage and the post-contact
Chapter 15 9. Recent investigations at the Ebenezer Mission cemetery
Chapter 16 10. Places people value: Social significance and cultural exchange in post-invasion Australia
Chapter 17 11. A past remembered: Aboriginal 'historical' places in central Queensland
Chapter 18 12. Epilogue: An archaeology of Indigenous/non-Indigenous Australia from 1788
Chapter 19 Index
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