Our music is taken from the song “Pourquoi je pas?”, and is kindly provided by Chocolat Billy, a band based in Bordeaux, France. To find out more about them, visit their pages on BandcampFacebook and the Free Music Archive.

ABOUT OUR GUESTS

Catherine Frieman is an associate professor in European archaeology at the School of Archaeology and Anthropology at the Australian National University. Previously, she was a post-doctoral research fellow at the Research Laboratory for Archaeology and the History of Art at the University of Oxford, and a lecturer in archaeology at the University of Nottingham. 

Her research interests include innovation and conservatism, and she is a material culture and technology specialist with a particular expertise in stone tools. Her fieldwork includes research in the UK, exploring human mobility and the diffusion of innovations in prehistoric Iberia and the Pacific, and studying lithic material and technology from Neolithic sites in Vietnam.

Catherine’s latest book, An archaeology of innovation: Approaching social and technological change in human society, was published in early 2021. She is also the Editor of the Journal of European Archaeology.

Further details
University biography
ResearchGate

James Flexner is a senior lecturer in historical archaeology and heritage at the University of Sydney. His research interests include landscape archaeology, historical archaeology with a geographic focus on Oceania, and early ethnographic collections in archaeological analysis.

His research prioritises close collaboration with local communities and public outreach to make archaeology more accessible. His doctoral research focused on a 19th century leprosarium at Kalawao, Moloka’i in the Hawaiian Islands. Since then, his research efforts have centred around fieldwork projects in Vanuatu.

James’s recent publications include articles on anarchism, degrowth and archaeology, mission archaeology in Southern Vanuatu, and an open access co-edited book on Community-Led Research

Further details:
University biography
ResearchGate

 

EPISODE RESOURCES

The Black Trowel Collective
Official website

Special Issue: Inequality and Race in the Histories of Archaeology
by William Carruthers
Bulletin of the History of Archaeology

Built on the bodies of slaves: how Africa was erased from the history of the modern world
by Howard W French
The Guardian

Is archaeology conceivable within the degrowth movement?
by Nicolas Zorzin
Archaeological Dialogues

Disjointing Time: Ancient Texts and Science Fiction
by Bill Caraher
Archaeology of the Mediterranean World (blog)

The archaeology of climate change: The case for cultural diversity
by Ariane Burke
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America

Introduction: Trowels in the Trenches: Archaeology as Social Activism
by Christopher P. Barton
University Press of Florida

Unfreezing the ice age: the truth about humanity’s deep past
by David Graeber and David Wengrow
The Guardian

Beyond the State: David Graeber and David Wengrow’s anarchist history of humanity
by Daniel Immerwahr
The Nation

Archaeology is changing, slowly. But it’s still too tied up in colonial practices
by Robyn Humphreys
The Conversation

The History of Archaeology as a ‘Colonial Discourse’
by Oscar Moro-Abadía 
Bulletin of the History of Archaeology

Archaeology, environmental justice, and climate change on islands of the Caribbean and southwestern Indian Ocean
by Kristina Douglass and Jago Cooper
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America

Twenty-First Century Colonialism in Maya Archaeology
by Francisco Estrada-Belli and Sandra L. López Varela
Anthropology News

What Does Archaeology Have to Do with Nationalism?
by Ellen C. Caldwell
JSTOR

“The Future of Archaeology Is Antiracist”: Archaeology in the Time of Black Lives Matter
by Ayana Omilade Flewellen et al.
American Antiquity

Pacific Matildas: Finding the Women in the History of Pacific Archaeology
by Emilie Dotte-Sarout
Bulletin of the History of Archaeology

All Hail Our Unappreciated Prehistoric Huntresses
by Amanda Arnold
The Cut

MORE BY JAMES FLEXNER

Anarchist theory in the Pacific and ‘Pacific anarchists’ in archaeological thought
in Tim Thomas (ed.), Theory in the Pacific, the Pacific in Theory: Archaeological Perspectives 
Routledge

Archaeology, anarchism, decolonization, and degrowth through the lens of Frase’s four futures
Archaeological Dialogues, 28(1)

Community-Led Research: Walking new pathways together
edited with Victoria Rawlings and Lynette Riley
University of Sydney Press

For too long, research was done on First Nations peoples, not with them. Universities can change this
with Victoria Rawlings and Lynette Riley
The Conversation

Who steers the canoe? Community-Led field archaeology in Vanuatu
in Victoria Rawlings, James Flexner and Lynette Riley (eds.), Community-Led Research: Walking new pathways together
University of Sydney Press

Degrowth and a sustainable future for archaeology
Archaeological Dialogues, 27(2)

Gendering the archaeology of the mission frontier in the New Hebrides
Journal of Pacific Archaeology, 11(2)

How to explain Polynesian Outliers’ heterogeneity
with Wanda Zinger et al.
in Aymeric Hermann et al. (eds.), Networks and Monumentality in the Pacific
Oxford: Archaeopress

Archaeologies of Island Melanesia: Current approaches to landscapes, exchange and practice
with Mathieu Leclerc
ANU Press

Complexities and diversity in archaeologies of Island Melanesia
in Mathieu Leclerc & James Flexner (eds.), Archaeologies of Island Melanesia: Current approaches to landscapes, exchange and practice
ANU Press

Detecting exchange networks in New Britain, Papua New Guinea: geochemical comparisons between ax-adze blades and in situ volcanic rock sources
with Alana Pengilley et al.
Archaeology in Oceania, 54(3)

Anarchy and Archaeology: Introduction
with Edward Gonzalez-Tennant
Journal of Contemporary Archaeology, 5(2)

Doing Archaeology in Non-State Space
Journal of Contemporary Archaeology, 5(2)

Foreign material culture from Hawaiian households in Leeward Kohala
with Julie Field et al.
Australasian Historical Archaeology, 36, 29-37

Reform and Purification in the Historical Archaeology of the South Pacific, 1840-1900
International Journal of Historical
Archaeology, 21(4)

 

MORE BY CATHERINE FRIEMAN

An archaeology of innovation Approaching social and technological change in human society
Manchester University Press

Telling stories about the past – theory and method in Australian Archaeology
with Jacqueline M. Matthews
Australian Archaeology, 85(3)

Survival, Social Cohesion and Rock Art: The Painted Hands of Western Arnhem Land, Australia
with Sally K. May et al.
Cambridge Archaeological Journal, 30(3)

Present pasts in the archaeology of genetics, identity, and migration in Europe: a critical essay
with Daniela Hofmann
World Archaeology, 51(4)

Who’s been using my burial mound? Radiocarbon dating and isotopic tracing of human diet and mobility at the collective burial site, Le Tumulus des Sables, southwest France
with Hannah F. James et al.
Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports
Volume 24 (April)

A Very Remote Storage Box Indeed: The Importance of Doing Archaeology with Old Museum Collections
with Lisa Janz
Journal of Field Archaeology, 43(4)

Aging Well: Treherne’s ‘Warrior’s Beauty’ Two Decades Later
with Joanna Brück et al.
European Journal of Archaeology

Flint Daggers in Prehistoric Europe
with Berit Valentin (eds.)
Oxbow Books

Double Edged blades: re-visiting the British (and Irish) flint daggers
Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society

Claimed by the sea: Salcombe, Langdon Bay, and other marine finds of the Bronze Age
with Stuart Needham and Dave Parham (eds.)
Council for British Archaeology

Innovation and Identity: The Language and Reality of Prehistoric Imitation and Technological Change
in Jeb J. Card (ed.), The Archaeology of Hybrid Material Culture
Southern Illinois University Press

Going to pieces at the funeral: Completeness and complexity in early Bronze Age jet ‘necklace’ assemblages
Journal of Social Archaeology, 12(3)

Innovation and Imitation: Stone Skeuomorphs of Metal from 4th to 2nd Millennia BC Northwest Europe
Archaeopress

Islandscapes and ‘islandness’: The prehistoric Isle of Man in the Irish seascape
Oxford Journal of Archaeology, 27 (2)

Seeing is perceiving?
with Mark Gillings
World Archaeology, 39(1)