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Ceci n’est pas un subalterne. A Comment on Indigenous Erasure in Ontology-Related Archaeologies

Ceci n’est pas un subalterne. A Comment on Indigenous Erasure in Ontology-Related Archaeologies Abstract Having followed with great interest the latest scholarly literature on ontology-related archaeologies, especially in this journal, this essay will problematise the extractive nature of much of this scholarship in the long-history of Western imperialism, in which Indigenous knowledge has been collected, depoliticised, classified, and then re-signified within Western frameworks. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Archaeological Dialogues Cambridge University Press

Ceci n’est pas un subalterne. A Comment on Indigenous Erasure in Ontology-Related Archaeologies

Archaeological Dialogues , Volume 28 (2): 7 – Dec 1, 2021

Ceci n’est pas un subalterne. A Comment on Indigenous Erasure in Ontology-Related Archaeologies

Archaeological Dialogues , Volume 28 (2): 7 – Dec 1, 2021

Abstract

Abstract Having followed with great interest the latest scholarly literature on ontology-related archaeologies, especially in this journal, this essay will problematise the extractive nature of much of this scholarship in the long-history of Western imperialism, in which Indigenous knowledge has been collected, depoliticised, classified, and then re-signified within Western frameworks.

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References (83)

Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Copyright
© The Author(s) 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press
ISSN
1478-2294
eISSN
1380-2038
DOI
10.1017/S1380203821000234
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Abstract Having followed with great interest the latest scholarly literature on ontology-related archaeologies, especially in this journal, this essay will problematise the extractive nature of much of this scholarship in the long-history of Western imperialism, in which Indigenous knowledge has been collected, depoliticised, classified, and then re-signified within Western frameworks.

Journal

Archaeological DialoguesCambridge University Press

Published: Dec 1, 2021

Keywords: Indigenous knowledge; archaeologies of ontology; intellectual appropriation; subalternity; performativity and citational practices; situatedness

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