Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) Christopher L. Witmore
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) Department of Behavioral and Social Sciences, Brown University School of Public Health, Providence, Rhode Island
ANO 2006
TIPO Artigo
PERIÓDICO Journal of Material Culture
ISSN 1359-1835
E-ISSN 1460-3586
EDITORA Annual Reviews (United States)
DOI 10.1177/1359183506068806
CITAÇÕES 13
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-18
MD5 efde21bfb5cace41919b28fc3ef29c70

Resumo

Why in the articulation of archaeological knowledge have wider sensory properties of the material world been over looked? This article considers this question in relation to sound. It argues that the neglect of sound is partly the product of human transactions with instruments and media in practice. Moreover, the denial of sound as a relevant category of archaeological inquiry arises out of modernist notions of space-time that reside at the heart of the discipline. So while the visual is linked with spatial properties that are resistant to change, the aural is connected with the temporal and is considered momentary and fleeting in nature. Still, it is argued that sound as a quality of things is fundamental to human sensation - to being. In building upon a non-modernist notion of time where entities and events quite distant in a linear temporality are proximate through their simultaneous entanglement and percolation I suggest we might learn what we can understand from tuning into the acoustic properties of the material past. But rather than reproduce an unnecessary dualism between seeing and hearing, this endeavor will require us to relearn how to see and hear at the same time through other, complimentary modes of articulation and engagement.

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