Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-25wd4 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-26T16:42:13.891Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

On critical approaches, unintended consequences and the data of everyday life in ‘performing towns’

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 November 2015

Extract

I welcome Axel Christophersen's effort to offer a new approach to the study of Scandinavian medieval urban communities, and his outline of an ‘urban archaeology of social practice’. His presentation of a theoretical framework and language offers many insights as to how archaeologists can analyse the way people constructed their social lives through practice. It is exciting to see studies that grapple with the complexities of everyday life in urban settings. This article makes a significant contribution in its explicit approach to a theory of practice that archaeologists can use to explore and describe social change. Christophersen draws heavily on the work of Shove, Pantzar and Watson as detailed in their 2012 book The dynamics of social practice. Everyday life and how it changes; I was unfamiliar with this work until reading this essay and I am impressed with the way this framework offers a language and a concrete approach to understanding how practices emerge, evolve and disappear. My goal here is not to revisit the details of this argument, but rather to push on some select issues raised in the paper. I first discuss the way that Christophersen frames his arguments against a processual archaeological approach, suggesting that his effort to provide an alternative might be unintentionally minimizing a more critical approach to everyday life. Next, I discuss the role and place of unintended consequences in Christophersen's argument. And finally I examine the way that Christophersen's approach might be more fully operationalized with data, providing some examples from my own work in eastern Africa.

Type
Discussion
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2015 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

De Certeau, M., 1984: The practice of everyday life, Berkeley.Google Scholar
Fleisher, J., 2013: Performance, monumentality and the ‘built exterior’ on the eastern African Swahili coast, Azania. Archaeological research in Africa 48 (2), 263–81.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fleisher, J., 2014: The complexity of public space at the Swahili town of Songo Mnara, Tanzania, Journal of anthropological archaeology 35, 122.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fleisher, J., and Sulas, F., 2015: Deciphering public spaces in urban contexts. Geophysical survey, multi-element soil analysis, and artifact distributions at the 15th–16th century AD Swahili settlement of Songo Mnara, Tanzania, Journal of archaeological science 55, 5570.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fleisher, J., and Wynne-Jones, S., 2010: Archaeological investigations at Songo Mnara, Tanzania. Urban space, social memory and materiality on the 15th- and 16th-century southern Swahili coast, field report, available online at www.songomnara.rice.edu/pdf/SM_Report_2009.pdf.Google Scholar
Fleisher, J., and Wynne-Jones, S., 2012: Finding meaning in ancient Swahili spaces, African archaeological review 29 (2–3), 171207.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fleisher, J., and Wynne-Jones, S., 2013: Archaeological investigations at Songo Mnara. 2011 field season. Field report, available online at www.songomnara.rice.edu/pdf/SM_Report_2011.pdf.Google Scholar
Gardiner, M., 2000: Critiques of everyday life, London.Google Scholar
Highmore, B., 2002: Everyday life and cultural theory. An introduction, London.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Highmore, B., 2011: Ordinary lives studies in the everyday, New York.Google Scholar
Joyce, R., 2004: Unintended consequences? Monumentality as a novel experience in formative Mesoamerica, Journal of archaeological method and theory 11 (1), 529.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Milek, K., and Roberts, H., 2013: Integrated geoarchaeological methods for the determination of site activity areas. A study of a Viking age house in Reykjavik, Iceland, Journal of archaeological science, 40, 1845–65.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rapoport, A., 1988: Levels of meaning in the built environment, in Poyatos, F. (ed.), Cross-cultural perspectives in non-verbal communication, Toronto, 317–36.Google Scholar
Rapoport, A., 1990: The meaning of the built environment. A nonverbal communication approach, Tucson.Google Scholar
Robin, C., 2013: Everyday life matters. Maya farmers at Chan, Gainesville.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shahack-Gross, R., Gilboa, A., Nagar-Hilman, O., Sharon, I. and Weiner, S., 2005: Geoarchaeology in an urban context. The uses of space in a Phoenician monumental building at Tel Dor (Israel), Journal of archaeological science 32, 1417–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shillito, L.-M., and Ryan, P., 2013: Surfaces and streets. Phytoliths, micromorphology and changing use of space at Neolithic Çatalhoyük (Turkey), Antiquity 87, 684700.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, M.E., 2007: Form and meaning in the earliest cities. A new approach to ancient urban planning, Journal of planning history 6 (1), 347.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sulas, F., and Madella, M., 2012: Archaeology at the micro-scale. Micromorphology and phytoliths at a Swahili stonetown, Archaeological and anthropological sciences 4 (2), 145–59.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wynne-Jones, S., 2013: The public life of the Swahili stonehouse, 14th–15th centuries AD, Journal of anthropological archaeology 32, 759–73.CrossRefGoogle Scholar