Litcius/Paper detail

Urban Networks and High-Definition Narratives: Rethinking the Archaeology of Urbanism

Rubina Raja, Søren Michael Sindbæk

2020Journal of Urban Archaeology23 citationsDOI

Abstract

Becoming urban is widely recognized as one of the great turning points of human societies across history. Urbanism afforded economies of scale, cultural entanglements, and environmental exchanges, leading to social and material complexity, which are at the core of today’s civilization. This paper argues that a new approach to urban archaeology may establish a more coherent view of urbanism as a defining expression of complex societies. Emerging applications of isotopic, biomolecular, and geoarchaeological methods are transforming archaeology’s ability to read the scale and pace of events and processes in urban stratigraphies. These methods hold the potential to create a ‘high-definition’ view of the past, integrating scientific techniques with contextual archaeological and historical approaches. Redefining urbanism as a network dynamic, such an approach may unleash new forms of data that are able to significantly test, challenge, and revise narratives of particular urban sites as well as fundamental assumptions about trajectories, dynamics, and causal conditions of urbanism.

Topics & Concepts

UrbanismPaceCivilizationLandscape urbanismNarrativeExpression (computer science)Scale (ratio)SociologyEnvironmental ethicsHistoryArchaeologyGeographyComputer scienceArchitectureArtCartographyPhilosophyProgramming languageGeodesyLiteratureArchaeology and ancient environmental studiesArchaeology and Rock Art StudiesHistorical and Cultural Archaeology Studies