That Raw and Ancient Cold: On Graham Harman’s Recasting of Archaeology

Author:

Sørensen Tim Flohr1

Affiliation:

1. Saxo Institute, Archaeology, University of Copenhagen , Copenhagen , Denmark

Abstract

Abstract This is a comment to Graham Harman’s 2019 response to an article by Þóra Pétursdóttir and Bjørnar Olsen (2018) in which they propose that a materially grounded, archaeological perspective might complement Harman’s historical approach in Immaterialism (2016). Harman responds that his book is indeed already more archaeological than historical, stipulating that history is the study of media with a high density of information, whereas archaeology studies media with a low density of information. History, Harman holds, ends up in too much detail, while archaeology has the advantage of lending itself to the imagination. Hence, his reading of history had the aim of tempering the historical information overload, in effect making the book a work of archaeology. In this comment, I want to do three things: (1) critique the idea that archaeological and historical media are inherently different with regard to their densities of information, (2) discuss how archaeology and history approach their media, and (3) reflect on conceptualisations of “archaeology” outside the discipline itself.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Philosophy

Reference91 articles.

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3. Antczak, Konrad A. and Beaudry, Mary C. “Assemblages of Practice. A Conceptual Framework for Exploring Human–Thing Relations in Archaeology.” Archaeological Dialogues, 26: 2 (2019), 87–110.

4. Bailey, Doug. “Disarticulate—Repurpose—Disrupt: Art/Archaeology.” Cambridge Archaeological Journal 27:4 (2017), 691–701.

5. Bailey, Doug. “Art/Archaeology: The Ineligible Project.” In Ineligible: A Disruption of Artefacts and Artistic Practice, edited by Doug Bailey and Sara Navarro, 10–25. Santo Tirso: Museu Internacional de Escultura Contemporânea de Santo Tirso, 2020.

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