- Add Social Profiles(Facebook, Twitter, etc.)
- Social Anthropology, Philosophy Of Religion, Historical Archaeology, Ceramics (Archaeology), Social Archaeology, Archaeology of Colonialism, and 19 moreGender Archaeology, Museum Studies, History and Memory, Heritage Tourism, Archaeology of ethnicity, Gay And Lesbian Studies, Holocaust Studies, Queer Theory and Queer Studies, Spanish Colonial Archaeology, Feminist Archaeology, Archaeology of Race, Archaeology of Labor, Gender and Sexuality, Queer Theory, Archaeological Method & Theory, Queer Studies, Comparative Religion, Classics, and Anthropology of Religionedit
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This article presents the key results of a major survey carried out by the NEARCH project on the public perception of archaeology and heritage across Europe. The analysis focuses on three main points of significance for contemporary... more
This article presents the key results of a major survey carried out by the NEARCH project on the public perception of archaeology and heritage across Europe. The analysis focuses on three main points of significance for contemporary archaeological practice. The first is the image of archaeology and its definition in the perception of the general public. The second concerns the values that archaeology represents for the public. The third focuses on the social expectations placed on archaeologists and archaeology. The NEARCH survey clearly indicates that there is a significant public expectation by Europeans that archaeology should work comprehensively across a broad range of areas, and that cultural heritage management in general needs to engage more with different archaeological and heritage groups.
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Incorporation of LiDAR technology within archeological workshop allowed to a more effec- tive research of difficult access areas. With no doubt, these, from the archaeological perspective, are forested areas. With the gradual advancement of... more
Incorporation of LiDAR technology within archeological workshop allowed to a more effec-
tive research of difficult access areas. With no doubt, these, from the archaeological perspective, are forested areas. With the gradual advancement of researches applying LiDAR data, a need for further development of non-invasive techniques within forested areas has emerged. In this paper we present
a case study of an early mediaeval round fort from Biedrzychowice Dolne, Lubuskie Province. Te area was analyzed using of airborne laser scanning, aerial photography, electrical resistance and
magnetic survey. Te goal of this study aimed at understanding of the spatial structure of this place,
as well as at recognizing limitation of the applied research methods
tive research of difficult access areas. With no doubt, these, from the archaeological perspective, are forested areas. With the gradual advancement of researches applying LiDAR data, a need for further development of non-invasive techniques within forested areas has emerged. In this paper we present
a case study of an early mediaeval round fort from Biedrzychowice Dolne, Lubuskie Province. Te area was analyzed using of airborne laser scanning, aerial photography, electrical resistance and
magnetic survey. Te goal of this study aimed at understanding of the spatial structure of this place,
as well as at recognizing limitation of the applied research methods
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Archeologia wkracza na nowe pola. Coraz częściej materialne relikty XX wieku traktowane są jako wartościowe dziedzictwo archeologiczne. W taki sposób można również postrzegać relikty obozów jenieckich z czasów I wojny światowej.
Issue: 63
Volume: 1
Page Numbers: 30-31
Publication Date: 2017
Publication Name: Archeologia Żywa
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by Mikołaj Kostyrko and Kornelia Kajda
Sprawozdania Archeologiczne, 2016, 68, s. 9-23
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Many sites related to the First World War are forgotten and neglected in today’s Poland. This paper shortly presents the ways of practicing conflict archaeology in Poland and it discusses results of the non-invasive archaeological survey... more
Many sites related to the First World War are forgotten and neglected in today’s Poland. This paper shortly presents the ways of practicing conflict archaeology in Poland and it discusses results of the non-invasive archaeological survey conducted in Tuchola and Czersk, places where during the First World War Germans built and run prisoners of war camps. In the article the material remains of the camps that have survived in the local landscapes till the present are analyzed. Both sites are at the same time remembered and forgotten by local communities. This paper tries to account for oblivion as an inherent part of local landscapes that adds a unique value to them.
DOI: 10.1007/s10761-016-0348-3
Issue: 1
Volume: 21
More Info: The final publication is available at link.springer.com.
Journal Name: International Journal of Historical Archaeology 21 (1): 134-151.
Page Numbers: 134-151
Publication Date: 2017
Publication Name: International Journal of Historical Archaeology
Research Interests: Archaeology, Anthropology, Historical Archaeology, Cultural Heritage, Heritage Studies, and 15 moreLandscape Archaeology, Social and Cultural Anthropology, History and Memory, Archaeological Method & Theory, Heritage Conservation, Memory Studies, Survey (Archaeological Method & Theory), Social Archaeology, First World War, Archaeological Theory, Cultural Heritage Management, Archaeology of the Contemporary Past, Cultural Anthropology, WWI, and The Archaeology of the Recent Past
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HERITAGE FOR ALL A Contribution to the Inclusion of People with Intellectual Disabilities in Archaeology: A Polish Perspectivemore
by Kornelia Kajda and Dawid Kobiałka
This paper discusses the results of project entitled Heritage for all: Perception of the past and archaeo logical heritage by people with intellectual disabili ties, which the authors carried out on a group of 14 young individuals who... more
This paper discusses the results of project entitled Heritage for all: Perception of the past and archaeo logical heritage by people with intellectual disabili ties, which the authors carried out on a group of 14 young individuals who were diagnosed with intellectual disabilities. The project aimed to detect how the past is perceived and conceptualized by students with learning and cognitive problems and how we, archaeologists and museum workers, can transfer knowledge about the past to them in a more appropriate way. This paper also provides a context for a need for inclusive archaeology as a way of practising archaeology as a discipline of social and cultural value for present-day people. Despite the limited number of people approached during the research and the specific character of education for people with intellectual disabilities in Poland, some conclusions can be drawn. First of all, participants in the project understood the past not as abstract, historical events, but rather as actions related to their personal experiences. Second ly, they remembered more about the past when it was shown and explained to them in an active, participatory way.
Volume: 23
Page Numbers: 131-156
Publication Date: 2015
Publication Name: Current Swedish Archaeology
Research Interests: Archaeology, Anthropology, Social Anthropology, Public Archaeology, Museum Studies, and 19 moreCultural Heritage, Material Culture Studies, Heritage Studies, Social and Cultural Anthropology, Archaeological Method & Theory, Heritage Conservation, Social Archaeology, Museums and Exhibition Design, Archaeological Theory, Cultural Heritage Management, Intangible Cultural Heritage (Culture), Cultural Anthropology, Material Culture, Museums, Heritage, Community Archaeology, Museum and Heritage Studies, Community archaeology and heritage interpretation, and Critical Heritage Studies
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Research Interests: Classical Archaeology, Gender Studies, History of Religion, Religion and Politics, Judith Butler, and 21 moreMarginalized Identities, Gramsci, Greek Archaeology, Ancient Greek Religion, Archaeological Theory, Greek Myth, Ancient Greek History, Ritual Theory, Hegemony, Archaeology of Ritual and Magic, Agency (Archaeological Theory), Cultural power and resistance, Greek Vases, Women and Gender Studies, Bell Hooks, Alfred Gell, Attic black-figured vases, Catherine Bell, Attic red-figure vases, Marginalization, and Athens and Attica
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Archaeologies of the recent past and the Soviet remains of the Cold War in Poland: A case study of Brzeźnica-Kolonia, Kłomino and Borne Sulinowomore
by Kornelia Kajda and Dawid Kobiałka
Journal Name: Sprawozdania Archaeologiczne 67: 9-22.
Publication Date: 2015
Research Interests: Modern History, Archaeology, Anthropology, Historical Archaeology, Cultural Heritage, and 19 moreMaterial Culture Studies, Heritage Studies, Landscape Archaeology, Social and Cultural Anthropology, Cold War, Archaeological Method & Theory, Heritage Conservation, Memory Studies, Contemporary Archaeology, Survey (Archaeological Method & Theory), Conflict Archaeology, Archaeological Theory, Cultural Heritage Management, Archaeology of the Contemporary Past, Cultural Anthropology, Archaeological Fieldwork, Material Culture, Modern conflict archaeology, and The Archaeology of the Recent Past
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Czersk is a small town like many others around the world. It lies among beautiful forests and lakes. However, this idyllic natural landscape hides stories of human humiliation, starvation, and death that go back to the First World War.... more
Czersk is a small town like many others around the world. It lies among beautiful forests and lakes. However, this idyllic natural landscape hides stories of human humiliation, starvation, and death that go back to the First World War.
Today, Czersk lies in the northern part of Poland, but before the outbreak of the Great War the region was part of Germany. After the first victories of the Kaiser's army over the Russians in August and September of 1914 in East Prussia, tens of thousands of Russian soldiers were taken prisoner.
Today, Czersk lies in the northern part of Poland, but before the outbreak of the Great War the region was part of Germany. After the first victories of the Kaiser's army over the Russians in August and September of 1914 in East Prussia, tens of thousands of Russian soldiers were taken prisoner.
Research Interests: Modern History, Archaeology, Historical Archaeology, Material Culture Studies, Landscape Archaeology, and 20 moreArchaeological Method & Theory, LiDAR, Memory Studies, Cultural Memory, Contemporary Archaeology, Survey (Archaeological Method & Theory), Conflict Archaeology, First World War, Archaeological Theory, Archaeology of the Contemporary Past, Archaeological Prospection, Archaeological Fieldwork, Archaeological Conservation, Material Culture, Modern conflict archaeology, WWI, The Archaeology of the Recent Past, LiDAR for Landscape Archaeology, Lidar and Satellite Remote Sensing, and LiDAR for Archaeology
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Archeologia jest jakoby z definicji nauką o przeszłości człowieka. Siłą rzeczy do tej pory opowiadaliśmy o zwierzętach z perspektywy ludzkiej. Jako archeolodzy badaliśmy symbolikę zwierzęcą w starożytnych społecznościach, czy też... more
Archeologia jest jakoby z definicji nauką o przeszłości człowieka. Siłą rzeczy do tej pory opowiadaliśmy o zwierzętach z perspektywy ludzkiej. Jako archeolodzy badaliśmy symbolikę zwierzęcą w starożytnych społecznościach, czy też staraliśmy się zrozumieć przeszłe procesy społeczne i gospodarcze uwzględniając rolę i znaczenie zwierząt (por. Ashby 2004, Russell 2009), etc.
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It was springtime in 1944. Deep inside a forest in Nazi Germany, a prisoner of war carved his name into the trunk of a tree. His surname was WOLSKI. This was no one-off event: in fact, there are dozens, or perhaps hundreds, of similar... more
It was springtime in 1944. Deep inside a forest in Nazi Germany, a prisoner of war carved his name into the trunk of a tree. His surname was WOLSKI. This was no one-off event: in fact, there are dozens, or perhaps hundreds, of similar carvings with names, surnames, initials and other texts on trees. Who carved them, and what archaeological evidence can they add to our understanding of the Second World War?
Research Interests: History, Cultural Studies, Archaeology, Anthropology, Historical Archaeology, and 28 moreCultural Heritage, Material Culture Studies, Heritage Studies, Landscape Archaeology, Social and Cultural Anthropology, Archaeological Method & Theory, Memory Studies, Cultural Memory, Contemporary Archaeology, Survey (Archaeological Method & Theory), Second World War, Conflict Archaeology, Materiality (Anthropology), Landscape archaeology (Anthropology), Archaeological Theory, Archaeology of the Contemporary Past, Cultural Anthropology, Archaeological Fieldwork, Archaeological Conservation, Memory and materiality, Material Culture, Second World War (History), Modern conflict archaeology, Archaeological survey, WWII, Materiality, The Archaeology of the Recent Past, and Material Culture & Materiality
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by Dawid Kobiałka and Kornelia Kajda
During the final stages of the Second World War, a trench was dug in woodland near a small Polish village, probably by prisoners of war. There are no eye witness accounts and very few artefacts survive. The only way the story of these... more
During the final stages of the Second World War, a trench was dug in woodland near a small Polish village, probably by prisoners of war. There are no eye witness accounts and very few artefacts survive. The only way the story of these prisoners can be told is through the material memory held by the woodland. This paper aims to broaden the concept of material culture by considering the archaeological record that is retained in the bark of living trees. The focus is on the beech trees of Chycina that may hold the only record of the construction of a small section of the Festungsfront Oder-Warthe-Bogen in western Poland in 1944.
Publication Date: 2015
Publication Name: Antiquity 89 (345): 683-696.
Research Interests: Archaeology, Historical Archaeology, Cultural Heritage, Material Culture Studies, Heritage Studies, and 11 moreArchaeological Method & Theory, Memory Studies, Contemporary Archaeology, Survey (Archaeological Method & Theory), Second World War, Conflict Archaeology, Archaeological Theory, Archaeology of the Contemporary Past, Material Culture, Modern conflict archaeology, and Material Culture & Materiality
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Współczesne społeczeństwa są złożonymi systemami. Tworzą je różnorakie grupy (np. wiekowe, zawodowe czy religijne). Kiedy prowadzi się badania nad rolą i znaczeniem przeszłości i dziedzictwa kulturowego trzeba być świadomym tego faktu.... more
Współczesne społeczeństwa są złożonymi systemami. Tworzą je różnorakie grupy (np. wiekowe, zawodowe czy religijne). Kiedy prowadzi się badania nad rolą i znaczeniem przeszłości i dziedzictwa kulturowego trzeba być świadomym tego faktu. Archeolodzy zwykli jednak zbywać go milczeniem. Zakłada się bowiem, że postrzeganie przeszłości i dziedzictwo mają znaczenie uniwersalne. My twierdzimy coś zgoła odmiennego. Przeszłość (sposób jej widzenia i odbierania) i dziedzictwo mają charakter kontekstualny: różni ludzie mogą je wielorako waloryzować. Co innego jest ważne dla dziecka, co innego może być ważne dla osoby dorosłej; w końcu, co innego może być istotne dla osoby starszej. Stąd też wynika nasz pomysł na zbadanie roli i znaczenia dziedzictwa archeologicznego wśród osób z niepełnosprawnością intelektualną.
Publication Date: May 22, 2015
Publication Name: Biogragfia Archeologii
Research Interests: Archaeology, Social Anthropology, Public Archaeology, Museum learning, Museum Studies, and 22 moreCultural Heritage, Heritage Studies, Social and Cultural Anthropology, Heritage Tourism, Archaeological Method & Theory, Cultural Heritage Conservation, Museum Education, Museum Anthropology, Heritage Conservation, Contemporary Archaeology, Social Archaeology, Museums and Exhibition Design, Cultural Heritage Management, Intangible Cultural Heritage (Culture), Archaeological Methodology, Museums, Heritage, Community Archaeology, Museum and Heritage Studies, Cultural and Social Anthropology, Community archaeology and heritage interpretation, and Community and Public Archaeology
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by Dawid Kobiałka and Kornelia Kajda
Borne Sulinowo, Kłomino czy też Brzeźnica-Kolonia to jedne z wielu pozostałości po zimnej wojnie na terenach dzisiejszej Polski. Miejsca te ucieleśniają to, co archeologiczne [the archaeological] (Shanks 2012) w wieloraki sposób: ruiny,... more
Borne Sulinowo, Kłomino czy też Brzeźnica-Kolonia to jedne z wielu pozostałości po zimnej wojnie na terenach dzisiejszej Polski. Miejsca te ucieleśniają to, co archeologiczne [the
archaeological] (Shanks 2012) w wieloraki sposób: ruiny, materialność, czas, trwanie oraz dziedzictwo to problemy do szpiku kości ważne i interesujące dla archeologa (ryc. 1). W
artykule pokrótce opisujemy te stanowiska archeologiczne z niedawnej przeszłości.
archaeological] (Shanks 2012) w wieloraki sposób: ruiny, materialność, czas, trwanie oraz dziedzictwo to problemy do szpiku kości ważne i interesujące dla archeologa (ryc. 1). W
artykule pokrótce opisujemy te stanowiska archeologiczne z niedawnej przeszłości.
Publication Date: Apr 11, 2015
Publication Name: Biografia Archeologii
Research Interests: Modern History, Archaeology, Historical Archaeology, Cultural Heritage, Material Culture Studies, and 27 moreHeritage Studies, Landscape Archaeology, Social and Cultural Anthropology, Cold War and Culture, History and Memory, Cold War, Archaeological Method & Theory, Heritage Conservation, Memory Studies, Contemporary Archaeology, Survey (Archaeological Method & Theory), Conflict Archaeology, Social Archaeology, Materiality (Anthropology), Archaeological Theory, Urban Ruins, Archaeology of the Contemporary Past, Memory and materiality, Material Culture, Modern conflict archaeology, Memory, Ruins, Materiality, The Archaeology of the Recent Past, Cultural and Social Anthropology, Lanscape Archeology, and Urbex
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Sto lat temu trwała już w najlepsze Wielka Wojna (I wojna światowa) niosąc śmierć milionom ludzkich istnień. Działania wojenne, zarówno na froncie wschodnim, jak i zachodnim, wiązały się z trwałym przekształcaniem całych krajobrazów.... more
Sto lat temu trwała już w najlepsze Wielka Wojna (I wojna światowa) niosąc śmierć milionom ludzkich istnień. Działania wojenne, zarówno na froncie wschodnim, jak i zachodnim, wiązały się z trwałym przekształcaniem całych krajobrazów. Oznacza to, że po wojnie, w sensie geopolitycznym i przemian w krajobrazie, Europa była już innym kontynentem. W tym tekście twierdzimy, iż archeologia może postrzegać wydarzenia z I wojny światowej jako przedmiot swoich badań. Archeologiczne badania materialnych pozostałości po Wielkiej Wojnie mogą pomóc w odzyskiwaniu pamięci o tych czasach. Uwagi nasze prezentujemy na przykładzie pozostałości niemieckiego obozu dla jeńców wojennych w Czersku (Kriegsgefangenenlager Czersk – Westpreussen), woj. pomorskie, założonym na początku I wojny światowej.
Publication Date: Feb 22, 2015
Publication Name: Biografia Archeologii
Research Interests: History, Cultural Studies, Archaeology, Historical Archaeology, Remote Sensing, and 37 moreCultural Heritage, Material Culture Studies, Heritage Studies, Landscape Archaeology, Social and Cultural Anthropology, History and Memory, Archaeological Method & Theory, LiDAR, Archaeological GIS, Memory Studies, Social and Collective Memory, Cultural Memory, Contemporary Archaeology, Survey (Archaeological Method & Theory), Conflict Archaeology, Social Archaeology, Prisoners of War, Collective Memory, World War I, Materiality (Anthropology), Archaeological Theory, Cultural Heritage Management, Remote sensing and GIS applications in Landscape Research, Archaeology of the Contemporary Past, Archaeological Prospection, Archaeological Fieldwork, Archaeological Conservation, Archaeology of Contemporary Past, Material Culture, Modern conflict archaeology, Memory, Materiality, The Archaeology of the Recent Past, LiDAR for Landscape Archaeology, Cultural and Social Anthropology, LiDAR for Archaeology, and Remote Sensing and GIS applications in Forestry
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Miejsca pamięci jako miejsca zapomnienia: archeologiczne badania mogiły z ‘czasów Wiosny Ludów’ w Jeziorach, gm. Mosinamore
by Dawid Kobiałka and Kornelia Kajda
Zagadnienie kulturowej i społecznej pamięci, nacisk na upamiętnianie przeszłości, przywracanie ponownie do życia zatraconych pamięci i doświadczeń jest od kilkudziesięciu polem iście interdyscyplinarnych badań. Wygląda na to, iż... more
Zagadnienie kulturowej i społecznej pamięci, nacisk na upamiętnianie przeszłości, przywracanie ponownie do życia zatraconych pamięci i doświadczeń jest od kilkudziesięciu polem iście interdyscyplinarnych badań. Wygląda na to, iż archeolodzy, antropolodzy kulturowi, historycy, filozofowie, kulturoznawcy, by wymienić tylko parę profesji dostrzegli duże znaczenie problematyki pamięci dla współczesnego społeczeństwa (np. Le Goff 1992; Teski, Climo 1995; Nora 1999). Można nawet w tym miejscu pokusić się o parafrazę znanej metafory Davida Lowenthala (1998), angielskiego historyka i geografa, który pisał o krucjacie dziedzictwa (kulturowego) we współczesnym świecie. Idąc tropem angielskiego uczonego dziś wydaje się także zasadne mówić o krucjacie pamięci, społecznym nacisku na pamiętanie i przywracanie przeszłości do życia (Terdiman 1993; Berliner 2005; Harrison 2012, 2013; Kajda 2013) (ryc. 1). Archeologia, co warto podkreślić, aktywnie współtworzy to pole badawcze (np. Olivier 2003, 2011; Van Dyke, Alcock 2003; Boric 2010; Theune 2013; Kobiałka 2015).
Publication Date: Dec 27, 2014
Publication Name: Biografia Archeologii
Research Interests: History, Military History, Archaeology, Social Anthropology, Historical Archaeology, and 32 moreCultural Heritage, Material Culture Studies, Heritage Studies, Landscape Archaeology, Social and Cultural Anthropology, Conflict, Heritage Tourism, Archaeological Method & Theory, Cultural Heritage Conservation, Heritage Conservation, Funerary Archaeology, Memory Studies, Social and Collective Memory, Cultural Memory, Survey (Archaeological Method & Theory), Conflict Archaeology, Battlefield Archaeology, Social Archaeology, Collective Memory, Archaeological Theory, Cultural Heritage Management, Architectural Heritage, Archaeological Fieldwork, Archaeological Methodology, Archaeological Heritage Management, Material Culture, Heritage, Modern conflict archaeology, Memory, Archaeological survey, Archaeological Excavation, and Cultural and Social Anthropology
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A spectre is haunting contemporary archaeologies – the spectre of the present. That is to say, one has recently been witnessing a shift in archaeological approaches: a new, ‘neo-materialistic paradigm’ (so-called return to things) is... more
A spectre is haunting contemporary archaeologies – the spectre of the present. That is to say, one has recently been witnessing a shift in archaeological approaches: a new, ‘neo-materialistic paradigm’ (so-called return to things) is slowly emerging on the scene. It indicates weak aspects of post-processual perspective with its emphasis on the social, meaning, sings and analyses of discourse, among others. On the contrary to post-processual approaches, here attention is mostly paid to materiality of things. What has also been clearly pointed out is the fact that, more than ever before, the present slowly becomes more important and interesting for archaeologists than the distant past (e.g. the Neolithic) (fig. 1). It is rather the materiality of things than constitutes archaeology than the focus on the distant past (e.g. Lucas 2004).
Publication Date: Jan 3, 2014
Publication Name: Archaeolog Blog
Research Interests: History, Military History, Cultural History, Cultural Studies, Archaeology, and 93 moreAnthropology, Historical Anthropology, Media Studies, Media and Cultural Studies, Social Anthropology, Historical Archaeology, Public Archaeology, Film Studies, Film Theory, Cultural Heritage, Ethnography, Material Culture Studies, Heritage Studies, Popular Culture, Film Analysis, Social and Cultural Anthropology, Cold War and Culture, History and Memory, Heritage Tourism, Industrial Heritage, Industrial Archaeology, Cold War, Archaeological Method & Theory, Cultural Heritage Conservation, Horror Film, Heritage Conservation, Cultures and heritage tourism, Ethnology, Cultural Heritage Recording, Documentation and Information Systems, Memory Studies, Anthropology of Memory, Cultural Memory, Ethnography (Research Methodology), Contemporary Archaeology, Dystopias, Survey (Archaeological Method & Theory), Social Archaeology, Theoretical Archaeology, Collective Memory, Materiality (Anthropology), American Popular Culture, Archaeological Theory, Soviet Union (History), Cultural Heritage Management, World Cultural Heritage, Intangible Cultural Heritage (Culture), Urban Ruins, Architectural Heritage, Archaeology of the Contemporary Past, Cultural Anthropology, Heritage Management, Archaeological Prospection, Archaeological Fieldwork, Archaeological Conservation, Urban archaeology, Archaeological Methodology, Archaeological Heritage Management, Archaeological theory and practice, Memory and materiality, Archaeology of Contemporary Past, Material Culture, Film, Zombie Films, Cold War history, Industrial Architecture, Heritage interpretation, Film and Media Studies, Heritage, Archaeologies of Memory, Memory, Archaeological survey, Archaeological Site Formation Processes, Science for Conservation and Restoration of Cultural Heritage, Ruins, Zombies, Antropología cultural, Museum and Heritage Studies, Materiality, The Archaeology of the Recent Past, Industrial Archaeology & Heritage, Dystopia, Urban Decay, Material Culture & Materiality, Cultural and Social Anthropology, Modern Ruins, Museums and Heritage, Industrial Ruins, Zombie, Zombie Studies, "We Are the Walking Dead": Race, Time, and Survival in Zombie Narrative, Sociology of Zombies, Ruin, and Architectural Heritage Conservation
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by Dawid Kobiałka and Kornelia Kajda
Można powiedzieć, że archeologia już jakiś czas temu przestała być archeologią. To znaczy, wielu badaczy odchodzi od rozumienia archeologii jako nauki o arche; nauki jedynie o tym co dawne, o tym co liczy setki czy też tysiące lat (np.... more
Można powiedzieć, że archeologia już jakiś czas temu przestała być archeologią. To znaczy, wielu badaczy odchodzi od rozumienia archeologii jako nauki o arche; nauki jedynie o tym
co dawne, o tym co liczy setki czy też tysiące lat (np. Buchli, Lucas 2001). Dziś archeologia jest raczej nauką o kulturze materialnej, bez względu na czas jej powstania. To właśnie
problematyka rzeczy ukonstytuowała archeologię jako naukę akademicką (Lucas 2004), można to chociażby dostrzec w tytule jednej z szeroko ostatnio omawianych w dyskursie
archeologicznym książek: archaeology is the discipline of things (Olsen i in. 2012). Z tego punktu widzenia archeologią jest zarówno studiowanie fragmentów neolitycznych naczyń, jak
i badania nad kulturą materialną z czasów II wojny światowej (ryc. 1). W rzeczy samej, w tym krótkim tekście chcemy pokrótce opisać nasze badania prowadzone w ramach archeologii
II wojny światowej (por. Schofield 2005).
co dawne, o tym co liczy setki czy też tysiące lat (np. Buchli, Lucas 2001). Dziś archeologia jest raczej nauką o kulturze materialnej, bez względu na czas jej powstania. To właśnie
problematyka rzeczy ukonstytuowała archeologię jako naukę akademicką (Lucas 2004), można to chociażby dostrzec w tytule jednej z szeroko ostatnio omawianych w dyskursie
archeologicznym książek: archaeology is the discipline of things (Olsen i in. 2012). Z tego punktu widzenia archeologią jest zarówno studiowanie fragmentów neolitycznych naczyń, jak
i badania nad kulturą materialną z czasów II wojny światowej (ryc. 1). W rzeczy samej, w tym krótkim tekście chcemy pokrótce opisać nasze badania prowadzone w ramach archeologii
II wojny światowej (por. Schofield 2005).
Publication Date: Oct 18, 2014
Publication Name: Biografia archeologii. Nowe perspektywy badawcze archeologii
Research Interests: History, Cultural History, Cultural Studies, Archaeology, Anthropology, and 55 moreSocial Anthropology, Peace and Conflict Studies, Cultural Heritage, Material Culture Studies, Heritage Studies, Archaeological Graphics & Illustration, Landscape Archaeology, Archaeological Science, Social and Cultural Anthropology, Conflict, History and Memory, Archaeological Method & Theory, Cultural Heritage Conservation, Heritage Conservation, Working Memory, Memory Studies, Social and Collective Memory, Cultural Memory, Contemporary Archaeology, Survey (Archaeological Method & Theory), Commemoration and Memory, Second World War, Conflict Archaeology, Battlefield Archaeology, Social Archaeology, Theoretical Archaeology, Prisoners of War, Collective Memory, Social History, Cultural Studies (Communication), World War II, Archaeological Theory, Archaeology of the Contemporary Past, Cultural Anthropology, Archaeological Prospection, Archaeological Fieldwork, Archaeological Methodology, Archaeological Heritage Management, Battlefields, Material Culture, Second World War (History), Modern conflict archaeology, Memory, Archaeological survey, Archaeological Site Formation Processes, Oral History and Memory, Battlefield Heritage Management and Metal Detecting, World War II history, Archaeological field survey, Archaeological Excavation, The Archaeology of the Recent Past, Battlefield Heritage Tourism, Landscape Archeology, Memoria, and Cultural and Social Anthropology
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The Cold War was one of the most significant geopolitical conflicts of the twentieth century. It’s no wonder that, decades on, cinema is still exploring the motif. Stanley Kubrick’s film Dr. Stranglelove (1959) and the James Bond series... more
The Cold War was one of the most significant geopolitical conflicts of the twentieth century. It’s no wonder that, decades on, cinema is still exploring the motif. Stanley Kubrick’s film Dr. Stranglelove (1959) and the James Bond series are just two well-known examples out of many. The Cold War has not only fascinated film directors. It has recently become research focus for archaeologists as well. Between military installations, nuclear bunkers, spy equipment, and a trail of documentation, the Cold War left behind a massive material legacy in many countries that is fascinating to study for its physical and human dimensions. (In fact, universities run courses on it.).
More Info: http://popanth.com/article/exploring-the-ruins-of- the-cold-war/
Publication Date: Mar 5, 2014
Publication Name: PopAnth
Research Interests: History, Military History, Cultural History, Cultural Studies, Archaeology, and 65 moreAnthropology, Media and Cultural Studies, Historical Archaeology, Public Archaeology, Museum Studies, Cultural Heritage, Material Culture Studies, Heritage Studies, Landscape Archaeology, Social and Cultural Anthropology, Cold War and Culture, Heritage Tourism, Nuclear Weapons, Industrial Heritage, Industrial Archaeology, Cold War, Archaeological Method & Theory, Cultural Heritage Conservation, Cultural Landscapes, Heritage Conservation, Cultures and heritage tourism, Anthropology of Memory, Contemporary Archaeology, Survey (Archaeological Method & Theory), Battlefield Archaeology, Social Archaeology, Post Cold War Era, Russian History, Materiality (Anthropology), Archaeological Theory, Cultural Heritage Management, World Cultural Heritage, Intangible Cultural Heritage (Culture), Art and Aesthetics of the Cold War, History of Nuclear Weapons, Urban Ruins, Architectural Heritage, Archaeology of the Contemporary Past, Cultural Anthropology, Heritage Management, Archaeological Fieldwork, Archaeological Conservation, Urban archaeology, Archaeological Methodology, Archaeological Heritage Management, Memory and materiality, Archaeology of Contemporary Past, Material Culture, Cold War history, Industrial Architecture, Heritage, Archaelogy, Science for Conservation and Restoration of Cultural Heritage, Ruins, Cold War Bunkers, Materialities, Museum and Heritage Studies, Materiality, The Archaeology of the Recent Past, Industrial Archaeology & Heritage, Material Culture & Materiality, Cultural and Social Anthropology, Modern Ruins, Urbex, and Archaeology of Memory
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Publication Date: 2014
Publication Name: Made in Sachsenhausen. Rekontekstualizacja i reapropriacja odwróconego różowego trójkąta wśród grup gejowsko-lesbijskich w Ameryce Północnej jako przykład kradzieży symbolicznej
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Research Interests:
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Publisher: bazhum.icm.edu.pl
Publication Date: 2009
Publication Name: Archeologia Żywa
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Nie ma jednego obrazu przeszłości. Jest ich tyle, ilu jest ludzi. Dlatego też przekaz, o tym, co minione, powinien być zróżnicowany - wynika z badań dotyczących postrzegania przeszłości, przeprowadzonych przez zespół poznańskich naukowców... more
Nie ma jednego obrazu przeszłości. Jest ich tyle, ilu jest ludzi. Dlatego też przekaz, o tym, co minione, powinien być zróżnicowany - wynika z badań dotyczących postrzegania przeszłości, przeprowadzonych przez zespół poznańskich naukowców wśród osób z niepełnosprawnością intelektualną – w grupie o specyficznych potrzebach, jak dotąd zaniedbywanej przez archeologów.
Publication Date: Jun 14, 2015
Publication Name: Nauka w Polsce. Serwis PAP poświęcony polskiej nauce
Research Interests: Archaeology, Anthropology, Social Anthropology, Public Archaeology, Museum Studies, and 17 moreCultural Heritage, Heritage Studies, Social and Cultural Anthropology, Heritage Tourism, Archaeological Method & Theory, Cultural Heritage Conservation, Museum Education, Museum Anthropology, Heritage Conservation, Museums and Exhibition Design, Cultural Heritage Management, Heritage Management, Heritage, Community Archaeology, Museum and Heritage Studies, Cultural and Social Anthropology, and Archaelogical Fieldwork
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By using airborne laser scanning (ALS), a team of archaeologists determined the layout of the German POW camp in Czersk (Pomerania), active during the First World War.
Publication Date: Mar 23, 2015
Publication Name: Science & Scholarship in Poland: News of Polish Science
Research Interests: Modern History, Archaeology, Historical Archaeology, Remote Sensing, Cultural Heritage, and 26 moreMaterial Culture Studies, Heritage Studies, Landscape Archaeology, Social and Cultural Anthropology, Archaeological Method & Theory, LiDAR, Survey (Archaeological Method & Theory), Conflict Archaeology, Social Archaeology, Prisoners of War, Remote Sensing (Earth Sciences), World War I, First World War, Archaeological Theory, Remote sensing and GIS applications in Landscape Research, Archaeology of the Contemporary Past, Remote sensing and GIS, Archaeological Fieldwork, Material Culture, Modern conflict archaeology, Archaeology, Historical Archaeology. Medieval Archaeology, Anthropology, Social Identities, Material Culture, Artefact Studies, Diaspora Studies, Trade and Exchange, The Archaeology of the Recent Past, Cultural History of the First World War, LiDAR for Landscape Archaeology, LiDAR for Archaeology, and Historical Archaeology
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Dzięki zastosowaniu lotniczego skaningu laserowego (LSL), zespół archeologów poznał rozplanowanie niemieckiego obozu jenieckiego w Czersku (woj. pomorskie), działającego w czasie I wojny światowej.
Publication Date: Mar 16, 2015
Publication Name: PAP Nauka w Polsce
Research Interests: History, Archaeology, Anthropology, Historical Archaeology, Remote Sensing, and 25 moreCultural Heritage, Material Culture Studies, Heritage Studies, Landscape Archaeology, Social and Cultural Anthropology, Archaeological Method & Theory, Heritage Conservation, Memory Studies, Social and Collective Memory, Cultural Memory, Survey (Archaeological Method & Theory), Conflict Archaeology, Social Archaeology, Prisoners of War, World War I, Cultural Heritage Management, Remote sensing and GIS applications in Landscape Research, Archaeology of the Contemporary Past, Archaeological Prospection, Archaeological Fieldwork, Material Culture, Memory, Archaeological survey, The Archaeology of the Recent Past, and Cultural History of the First World War
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POZNAŃ, POLAND—Carvings in beech trees are helping archaeologists date World War II-era fortifications that were built between 1934 and 1944 in a forest in western Poland. Known as the Miedzyrzecz Fortification Region, the trenches were... more
POZNAŃ, POLAND—Carvings in beech trees are helping archaeologists date World War II-era fortifications that were built between 1934 and 1944 in a forest in western Poland. Known as the Miedzyrzecz Fortification Region, the trenches were intended to defend the eastern border of the Third Reich. Dawid Kobialka and colleagues Maksymilian Frąckowiak and Kornelia Kajda of the Institute of Prehistory at Adam Mickiewicz University think that some of the inscriptions from 1944 may have been carved by Polish captives forced to work on the fortifications by the Germans
Research Interests: History, Cultural History, Archaeology, Anthropology, Historical Archaeology, and 27 moreCultural Heritage, Material Culture Studies, Heritage Studies, Landscape Archaeology, Social and Cultural Anthropology, Conflict, Archaeological Method & Theory, Cultural Heritage Conservation, Memory Studies, Social and Collective Memory, Cultural Memory, Contemporary Archaeology, Survey (Archaeological Method & Theory), Commemoration and Memory, Second World War, Social Archaeology, Collective Memory, World War II, Archaeology of the Contemporary Past, Cultural Anthropology, Archaeological Fieldwork, Archaeological Conservation, Material Culture, Heritage, Memory, World War II history, and The Archaeology of the Recent Past
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The discovery of carvings in the trees allowed to uncover an unknown episode of the Międzyrzecz Fortification Region near Chycina in the Lubusz province. This is one of the first attempts to draw attention to such objects as... more
The discovery of carvings in the trees allowed to uncover an unknown episode of the Międzyrzecz Fortification Region near Chycina in the Lubusz province. This is one of the first attempts to draw attention to such objects as archaeological and historical sources.
Publication Date: Oct 31, 2014
Publication Name: Science & Scholarship in Poland. News of Polish Science
Research Interests: History, Modern History, Cultural History, Cultural Studies, Archaeology, and 54 moreAnthropology, Historical Anthropology, Art History, Visual Anthropology, Social Anthropology, Historical Archaeology, Memory (Cognitive Psychology), Cultural Heritage, Material Culture Studies, Heritage Studies, Landscape Archaeology, Archaeological Science, Social and Cultural Anthropology, Conflict, War Studies, History and Memory, Archaeological Method & Theory, Cultural Heritage Conservation, Heritage Conservation, Working Memory, Memory Studies, Social and Collective Memory, Cultural Memory, Survey (Archaeological Method & Theory), Commemoration and Memory, Second World War, Conflict Archaeology, Battlefield Archaeology, Thing Theory, Prisoners of War, Collective Memory, Materiality (Anthropology), World War II, Archaeological Theory, Cultural Heritage Management, Architectural Heritage, Archaeology of the Contemporary Past, Cultural Anthropology, Archaeological Prospection, Archaeological Fieldwork, Archaeological Conservation, Archaeological Methodology, Memory and materiality, Material Culture, Heritage interpretation, Heritage, Memory, Archaeological survey, Oral History and Memory, Science for Conservation and Restoration of Cultural Heritage, Materiality, The Archaeology of the Recent Past, Material Culture & Materiality, and Refugee memory
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Odkrycie rytów na drzewach umożliwiło poznanie nieznanego epizodu Międzyrzeckiego Rejonu Umocnionego w rejonie miejscowości Chycina w woj. lubuskim. Jest to jedna z pierwszych prób zwrócenia uwagi na tego typu obiekty jako źródła... more
Odkrycie rytów na drzewach umożliwiło poznanie nieznanego epizodu Międzyrzeckiego Rejonu Umocnionego w rejonie miejscowości Chycina w woj. lubuskim. Jest to jedna z pierwszych prób zwrócenia uwagi na tego typu obiekty jako źródła archeologiczne i historyczne.
Publication Date: Oct 16, 2014
Publication Name: Nauka w Polsce. Serwis PAP poświęcony nauce
Research Interests: History, Modern History, Cultural Studies, Archaeology, Anthropology, and 54 moreSocial Anthropology, Historical Archaeology, Peace and Conflict Studies, Cultural Heritage, Material Culture Studies, Heritage Studies, Landscape Archaeology, Archaeological Science, Social and Cultural Anthropology, Conflict, History and Memory, Archaeological Method & Theory, Cultural Heritage Conservation, Heritage Conservation, Working Memory, Memory Studies, Social and Collective Memory, Cultural Memory, Contemporary Archaeology, Survey (Archaeological Method & Theory), Commemoration and Memory, Second World War, Conflict Archaeology, Battlefield Archaeology, Social Archaeology, Collective Memory, World War II, Archaeological Theory, memoralization, Archaeology of the Contemporary Past, Cultural Anthropology, Archaeological Prospection, Archaeological Fieldwork, Archaeological Conservation, Archaeological Methodology, Archaeological Heritage Management, Archaeology of Contemporary Past, Archaeological photography, Material Culture, Second World War (History), Modern conflict archaeology, Memory, Archaeological survey, Archaeological Site Formation Processes, Battlefield Heritage Management and Metal Detecting, World War II history, Archaeological Excavation, The Archaeology of the Recent Past, Antropología, Social Conflict, Archeological Theory and Method, Memoria, Cultural and Social Anthropology, and Critical Heritage Studies
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Research Interests: Archaeology, Historical Archaeology, Public Archaeology, Cultural Heritage, Material Culture Studies, and 16 moreHeritage Studies, Landscape Archaeology, Archaeological Method & Theory, Heritage Conservation, Memory Studies, Cultural Memory, Survey (Archaeological Method & Theory), Social Archaeology, Archaeological Theory, Cultural Heritage Management, Archaeology of the Contemporary Past, Archaeological Fieldwork, Material Culture, Community Archaeology, The Archaeology of the Recent Past, and Community archaeology and heritage interpretation
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Archaeology involved. Promoting remote sensing archaeology through cooperation with local communities [presented on Sensing the Past - ArcLand conference 24-26 Februrary 2015, Frankfurt, Germany]more
by Mikołaj Kostyrko and Kornelia Kajda
Our project is a result of coopertaion between the Institute of Prehistory at the Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań (ArcLand) and the Association for the Villages Development "Together" form Bieniów
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Our poster presents the results of reclaiming material memories of the Prisoners of War Camp (PoW), run by the Germans during the First World War in Czersk (Poland) using ALS data and its derivatives. Till our prospection and use of ALS... more
Our poster presents the results of reclaiming material memories of the Prisoners of War Camp (PoW), run by the Germans during the
First World War in Czersk (Poland) using ALS data and its derivatives. Till our prospection and use of ALS data this place has been unknown to a wider public, only cemetery, postcards and vary few historical documents remained.
First World War in Czersk (Poland) using ALS data and its derivatives. Till our prospection and use of ALS data this place has been unknown to a wider public, only cemetery, postcards and vary few historical documents remained.
Research Interests: History, Modern History, Archaeology, Material Culture Studies, Landscape Archaeology, and 21 moreHistory and Memory, Archaeological Method & Theory, LiDAR, Memory Studies, Cultural Memory, Contemporary Archaeology, Survey (Archaeological Method & Theory), Conflict Archaeology, First World War, Archaeological Theory, Archaeology of the Contemporary Past, Archaeological Prospection, Archaeological Conservation, LiDAR for topographic mapping, Material Culture, Modern conflict archaeology, WWI, The Archaeology of the Recent Past, LiDAR for Landscape Archaeology, LiDAR for Archaeology, and Battlefield Archaeology, Conflict Archaeology
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The idea of human beings uniqueness and their control over nature has disastrous political and ecological consequences. It prevents us from understanding species interdependences and precludes us to fully understand landscapes. One can... more
The idea of human beings uniqueness and their control over nature has disastrous political and ecological consequences. It prevents us from understanding species interdependences and precludes us to fully understand landscapes. One can ask: are we the only ones that influence the meshwork of the living world or is it possible to re-construct landscape where only humans live? If we are really interested in landscapes we need more subtle awareness of complicated web of connections that constitute bodies.
People, things, animals and places are mutually constituted. When comes to leaving traces, people are not privileged. Animals leave traces too. Thus, in our paper we would like to present reflections on archaeology of animals from the perspective of aerial archaeology and human-animal studies. Remote sensing allows us to study the issues of how wild as well as domestic animals leave their traces behind, how they change and inhabit landscape, as well as, how they interact with humans in it.
Archaeological and remote sensing approach to the landscape enables us to understand places that we dwell not as assemblages of sites, but as assemblages of traces produced by people, animals, machines and their various mixes and hybrids. We should be open to any entities that may participate in a world we dwell. Only when multiplicity of things is included, landscapes become pluralistic, relevant and democratic. This point of view not only reconstitutes our approach towards landscape and its perception but it also provokes new questions towards heritage management.
People, things, animals and places are mutually constituted. When comes to leaving traces, people are not privileged. Animals leave traces too. Thus, in our paper we would like to present reflections on archaeology of animals from the perspective of aerial archaeology and human-animal studies. Remote sensing allows us to study the issues of how wild as well as domestic animals leave their traces behind, how they change and inhabit landscape, as well as, how they interact with humans in it.
Archaeological and remote sensing approach to the landscape enables us to understand places that we dwell not as assemblages of sites, but as assemblages of traces produced by people, animals, machines and their various mixes and hybrids. We should be open to any entities that may participate in a world we dwell. Only when multiplicity of things is included, landscapes become pluralistic, relevant and democratic. This point of view not only reconstitutes our approach towards landscape and its perception but it also provokes new questions towards heritage management.
Research Interests: Remote Sensing, Aerial Archaeology, Animal Studies, LiDAR, Remote Sensing (Earth Sciences), and 11 moreRemote sensing and GIS applications in Landscape Research, Bruno Latour, Remote sensing and GIS, LiDAR for Forestry, LiDAR for topographic mapping, Tim Ingold, Unmanned Aerial Vehicles, Aerial Photogrammetry, LiDAR for Landscape Archaeology, Lidar and Satellite Remote Sensing, and Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV)
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Książka jest katalogiem do wystawy pt. "Między pamięcią a zapomnieniem: archeologia pierwszowojennego obozu jenieckiego w Czersku". Omawia ona różnorodne materialne pozostałości związane z jeńcami przetrzymywanymi w Czersku.