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Bending Archaeology Toward Social Justice
Barbara J. Little
其他書名
Transformational Action for Positive Peace
出版
University of Alabama Press
, 2023-07-18
主題
Social Science / General
Social Science / Archaeology
ISBN
081736093X
9780817360931
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=Rum6EAAAQBAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
Introduces an analytic model for how archaeologists can work toward social justice
In this time of Black Lives Matter, the demands of NAGPRA, and climate crises, the field of American archaeology needs a radical transformation. It has been largely a white, male, privileged domain that replicates an entrenched patriarchal, colonial, and capitalist system. In
Bending Archaeology toward Social Justice
, Barbara J. Little explores the concepts and actions required for such a change, looking to peace studies, anthropology, sociology, social justice activism, and the achievements of community-based archaeology for helpful approaches in keeping with the UN Sustainable Development Goals. She introduces an analytic model that uses the strengths of archaeology to destabilize violence and build peace.
As Little explains, the Diachronic Transformational Action model and the peace/violence triad of interconnected personal, cultural, and structural domains of power can help disrupt the injustice of all forms of violence.
Diachronic
connects the past to the present to understand how power worked in the past and works now.
Transformational
influences power now by disrupting the stability of the violence triad.
Action
refers to collaborative work to diagnose power relations and transform toward social justice.
Using this framework, Little confronts the country’s founding and myth of liberty and justice for all, as well as the American Dream. She also examines whiteness, antiracism, privilege, and intergenerational trauma, and offers white archaeologists concepts to grapple with their own racialized identities and to consider how to relinquish white supremacy. Archaeological case studies examine cultural violence and violent direct actions against women, Indigenous peoples, African Americans, and Japanese Americans, while archaeologies of poverty, precarity, and labor are used to show how archaeologists have helped expose the roots of these injustices. Because climate justice is integral to social justice, Little showcases insights that archaeology can bring to bear on the climate crisis and how lessons from the past can inform direct actions today. Finally, Little invites archaeologists to embrace inquiry and imagination so that they can both imagine and achieve the positive peace of social justice.