1st Edition

Archaeological Perspectives on Contested and Political Landscapes

Edited By Eduardo Herrera Malatesta Copyright 2025
284 Pages
by Routledge

284 Pages
by Routledge

284 Pages
by Routledge

This book focuses on alternative definitions of landscape in archaeology, particularly those that explicitly address landscapes’ political aspects. In doing so, this volume emphasizes the non-static, dialogic nature of landscape within a community and acknowledges how a community’s composition and its relationship with the landscape can lead to tensions and even violent conflicts with other... Read more
Chapter 1. Introduction: Contested and Political Landscapes - Eduardo Herrera Malatesta, Chapter 2. On Contested Taskscapes - Eduardo Herrera Malatesta, Chapter 3. Archaeology in the Tripartito: Landscape and the nation-state in the south-central Andes - Noa Corcoran-Tadd, Chapter 4. The Dramatized Landscape of Juktas: A topoanalytic approach to a Minoan peak sanctuary in Crete - Maria Chountasi, Chapter 5. Lived space of displaced people: A comparative approach to contested spaces in Iron Age Northern Mesopotamia and modern Berlin - Vera Egbers, Chapter 6. The Landscape of Moving Tree Trunks and Other Unnatural Phenomenon: Contesting Archaeologies from the Global South - O. Hugo Benavides, Chapter 7. Landscapes of power and resilience: Aristocratic-driven landscapes in the Duero basin - Jesús García Sánchez, Chapter 8. Changing Landscapes, Changing People in Northwestern New Mexico - Kellam Throgmorton, Chapter 9. Cruzando la Cerca: Indigenous Mounded Landscapes in Nicaragua - Alexander Geurds, Chapter 10. Pretoria, drawing board of the Apartheid regime - David Koren, Chapter 11. Discussion: Reconsidering all that you see: reassessing landscapes in archaeology - Juan P. Bellón and Carmen Rueda

Biography

Eduardo Herrera Malatesta is a Venezuelan archaeologist specialising in Landscape research, regional surveys, and Geographical Information Systems. He studied anthropology with a specialisation in archaeology at the Universidad Central de Venezuela (BA) and Instituto Venezolano de Investigaciones Cientificas (MA). He then specialised in GIS in archaeology at the University College London (MSc), and later, he got his PhD in Archaeology at Leiden University. He has held postdoctoral positions at Leiden University and later at Aarhus University as a Marie Curie postdoctoral fellow. He has recently started a position as a postdoctoral researcher at Leiden University.