A collection of essays dedicated to the distinguished and highly esteemed archaeologist Reinhard Bernbeck from the Institute of Near Eastern Archaeology at Freie Universität Berlin, published on the occasion for his 65th birthday.
“What Does This Have to Do with Archaeology?” is a collection of essays published on the occasion of Reinhard Bernbeck’s 65th birthday. The distinguished archaeologist Reinhard Bernbeck from the Institute of Near Eastern Archaeology at Freie Universität Berlin is an internationally highly esteemed colleague. This commemorative volume (Festschrift) reflects his great influence on many different areas of archaeological research from the Neolithic in Central Asia to contemporary archaeology in Europe.
The essays are written by an international circle of colleagues who contributed scientific papers, photographs, and personal memories of joint research and scientific exchange with Reinhard Bernbeck. The book covers a wide range of subjects, from analytical discussions on ethnology, spatial theory, and digital archaeology to more practical considerations of research practices related to fieldwork, data management, and alternative modes of archaeological writing. Case studies provide insights into new investigations and reinterpretations of ancient material culture of Southwest and Central Asia. Other contributions address the political use of archaeology in the present, as well as the heritage management and the study of the most recent past.
Preface Editorial Collective/Herausgeber*innenkollektiv
List of Publications by Reinhard Bernbeck
Anecdotes – Reflections
Susanne Kerner: The Early Years: How Did Reinhard Bernbeck Become the Archaeologist He Is Today?
Elliott Shore and Maria Sturm: Alle Menschen sind Ausländer
Jason Kennedy, Sepideh Saeedi, and Maresi Starzmann: A Picture of Praxis
Vera Egbers, Jana Eger, and Nolwen Rol: How Reinhard Bernbeck Taught Us Excavating – A Photo Essay from Monjukli Depe
Philipp Tollkühn: Über den Wert des Reflektierens: Drei prägende Erfahrungen
Theoretical Approaches and Methodologies
Stefan Burmeister: Indogermanische Männerbünde – für Frauen kein schöner Land
Mette Bangsborg Thuesen and Georg Cyrus: A Feminist Approach to Spatial Theory – Identifying Gendered Spaces in the Neo-Assyrian and Sasanian Empires
Sebastian Hageneuer: What Is a Digital Archaeologist?
Svend Hansen: Bronisław Malinowski, Marcel Mauss und die Entdeckung der Gabe. Ein Gesellschaftsvertrag vor dem Staat
Zeidan A. Kafafi: Archaeological Excavations: An Example from Jordan
Hana Kubelková and Petr Pajdla: Publishing Archaeological Data: Pitfalls and Challenges
Jan Johannes Miera: Diachrone Siedlungsarchäologie in Deutschland: Methodische Probleme und Potenziale
Moslem Mishmastnehi: Simple Sherds, Complex Problem
Birgül Öğüt, Benjamin Irvine, Ricarda Braun, and Carolin Jauß: Betwixt the Chairs – Some Thoughts and Case Studies Reflecting on Experiences of Cooperation between Archaeology and the Natural Sciences
Sarvenaz Parsa: Fire Temple Closing Methods: Application of Lefebvre’s Theory to the Zoroastrian Architecture of Ancient Persia
Lea Rees: Spaces of Possibilities. Negotiating Space at Dahshur, Egypt
Sabine Reinhold: Remarks on Analogy in Archaeology – And Why They Still Matter
Stefan Schreiber: Die Verdammten dieser Erde. Gedanken zu einer emanzipatorischen Archäologie
Maresi Starzmann: Research as Participatory Practice
Ruth M. Van Dyke: Pueblo Bonito: An Archaeological Nouveau Roman
Current Research in Southwest Asian Archaeology
Dominik Bonatz: Picturing Abundance: An Early Iron Age Stamp Seal from Tell Ushayer in Jordan
Sarah K. Costello: Jeton düştü: Symbolic Storage in the Halaf Period
Ilia Heit: Children in Ruins: Abandoned Houses as Children’s Places at Aeneolithic Monjukli Depe (SW Turkmenistan)
Morteza Hessari and Hassan Akbari: Tappeh Shoghali. A Northern Variant of the Sialk III Culture Horizons: Classification and Typology of the Pottery from the 2006 Excavation Campaign
Jason R. Kennedy: Exploring Communal Meals as Resistance to Authority in the Late Chalcolithic 3 Period of Northern Mesopotamia
Aydogdy Kurbanov: The Late Antique Dehistan
Takehiro Miki: Reconsidering the Gap in Neolithic Fars: Reanalysis of Pottery from the TMB (Tall-e Mushki B) Pit at Tall-e Mushki
Judith Thomalsky: Co-Habitation? Death and Life at Hajji Firuz, NW-Iran
Archaeology of Modernity
Maria Bianca D’Anna and Pamela Fragnoli: A Walk to the Narrenturm in Vienna. Remarks on the Heritagization of Psychiatric Institutions
Stefan R. Hauser: “Erbaut in den Kriegsjahren 1914 – 1915 – 1916 – 1917”: Archaeologists in World War I
Barbara Hausmair: “Fenced Ambiguity”. Is Underground Barbed Wire in Former Nazi Camps an Indicator for the Presence of Soviet Prisoners-of-War?
Barbara Helwing: Excavating the Dead: Contemplating Practices in Archaeological Research
Thomas Kersting: Is There Such a Thing as “Jewish Finds” in Modern Times Archaeology in Brandenburg? And If Not, Why?
Randall McGuire: Can Archaeology Slow Down Fast Capitalism?
Michael Meyer: Archäologie und Öffentlichkeit im Nationalsozialismus – zwei Miszellen
Kathrin Misterek: „… eine gute und erfolgreiche Basis zu Verhandlungen für die Gewinnung neuer Aufträge beim Beginn des Wiederaufbaus der deutschen Luftfahrtindustrie im Jahre 1955“. Kontinuitäten in der Industrie am Beispiel von Fritz Feilcke, Direktor des Kampfflugzeugwerkes Tempelhof 1940–1945
Maryam Naeimi and Fabian Sarga: Archaeology of Fear, Bond and Trade – Addressing the “Other” through Funerary Inscriptions in Armenian Cemeteries in Markazi Province, Iran
Sepideh Saeedi: A Perspective on Decolonizing Archaeological Theory and Practice
Julia Schönicke: Capitalizing Ruins or Ruins of Capitalism – Göbekli Tepe and the Impact of Excavations in the Anthropocene
Claudia Theune: Future Research Perspectives on Internment Camps
Epilogue
Susan Pollock: The Ears of the State