Archeology as a Metaphor in Contemporary Culture
Archeology as a Metaphor in Contemporary Culture
Author(s): Jacek WoźnySubject(s): Archaeology
Published by: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Łódzkiego
Keywords: Archeology;History of Science;Metaphor;Research Methods; Contemporary Culture
Summary/Abstract: The scientific discipline of archeology has gone through various stages of its development and improvement of research methods. First, it was combined with ancient history and the history of art. In the mid-nineteenth century, the base of its chronology was on biblical events. Modernist archeology of the twentieth century focused on classifying monuments and reconstructing cultural processes. In the second half of the twentieth century, archeology inspired other disciplines of culture and science to “stratigraphically” look at their own history. In this way, the stratification of scientific thought (archeology of knowledge), the history of photography (archeology of photography), and the media (archeology of media) began to be analyzed. Archeology has become a cognitive metaphor in contemporary culture. Lack of knowledge of the theoretical and methodological achievements worked out by archaeologists may, after some time, lead to the trivialization and petrification of the archaeological metaphor, although today it still seems fresh and innovative for “archeology of media,” “archeology of photography,” or “archeology of modernism.”
Journal: Qualitative Sociology Review
- Issue Year: 17/2021
- Issue No: 1
- Page Range: 28-38
- Page Count: 11
- Language: English