Abstract
While archaeologists have always shown great interest in the rise and fall of premodern states, they perennially show little interest in their own. This is particularly troubling because the state is the nexus of power in archaeology. In practice, virtually all archaeology is state archaeology, imbued with and emboldened by state power. It is in this light that contributors to this Special Issue of Archaeologies grapple with the archaeology–state nexus, addressing such timely issues as colonialism, capitalism, and cultural resource or heritage management (CRM/CHM). We outline here the archaeology–state nexus concept and introduce the Special Issue.
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CITATION STYLE
Hutchings, R. M., & Dent, J. (2017, April 1). Archaeology and the Late Modern State: Introduction to the Special Issue. Archaeologies. Springer New York LLC. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11759-017-9311-0
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