编辑

IF 0.5 0 ARCHAEOLOGY
I. Banks, T. Pollard
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Kazakhstan is an entirely new frontier, a place that has not been covered by the Journal at all. It is very welcome to have such diversity of locations in the Journal and emphasises the fact that conflict archaeology is being undertaken across the world. The geographical locations are matched by the fact that, with the exception of McNutt, the authors are from outwith the mainstream Anglo-American conflict community that is so apparent at Fields of Conflict every 2 years. Having a Botswanan and two Kazakhs as authors does something to redress the balance of nationalities reported at the last Fields of Conflict conference, where British and American authors vastly outweighed the other nationalities. Conflict archaeology is a vibrant field of study, and the previous issues in the volume emphasised this with their European focus. It is useful to be reminded of the wider interest in conflict beyond Europe and America, however. There is a tendency amongst many outside the field to assume that conflict archaeology is mainly about battlefields, and if not battlefields, then perhaps military installations. However, as we made very clear at the start of the Journal in 2015, the concept of conflict archaeology guiding the Journal of Conflict Archaeology is a broad definition of conflict that does not require armies but looks at other forms of conflict as well. We have hosted papers on industrial conflict (Saitta, Walker, and Reckner 2005), art historical analysis (Ferris 2005; Parnell 2013; Breeze & Ferris 2016), protest activism (Fisher 2008), forestry camps in WWII (Sneddon 2008), colonial conflict (Grguric 2009), military-related industry (Myles 2011), and cultural resource management (Banks and Pollard 2011; Van der Auwera 2012). While battlefields are a major area of research in conflict archaeology, conflict archaeology and battlefield archaeology are not synonymous. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

这本杂志第12卷的最后一期比前两期有更多的多样性。这种多样性的一个方面是地理上的。除了一篇以美国为背景的论文(McNutt)外,还有一篇关于南非的论文(Mosothwane)和一篇关于哈萨克斯坦的论文(Arzhantseva和Tazhekeev)。这与前两期的论文都位于欧洲形成了鲜明对比。与前几期相比,地理范围非常受欢迎,但欢迎本期三份文件还有其他原因。令人惊讶的是,《华尔街日报》上关于美国主题的论文很少,所以有一篇报道这一领域的论文是很好的。2005年,南非在《华尔街日报》第一卷上发表了一篇论文,自那以后,南非也没有得到任何服务。哈萨克斯坦是一个全新的边疆,《华尔街日报》根本没有报道过这个地方。《华尔街日报》上有如此多样的地点是非常受欢迎的,并强调了世界各地正在进行冲突考古的事实。地理位置相匹配的事实是,除了麦克纳特,作者来自主流英美冲突社区之外,这在每两年一次的《冲突场》中非常明显。有一位博茨瓦纳人和两位哈萨克人作为作者,有助于纠正上一次冲突领域会议上报道的民族平衡,在会议上,英国和美国的作者远远超过了其他民族。冲突考古是一个充满活力的研究领域,本卷之前的几期都以欧洲为重点强调了这一点。然而,提醒人们注意欧洲和美国以外对冲突的更广泛兴趣是有益的。许多局外人倾向于认为冲突考古主要是关于战场的,如果不是战场,那么可能是军事设施。然而,正如我们在2015年《冲突考古杂志》一开始就明确指出的那样,指导《冲突考古期刊》的冲突考古概念是对冲突的广泛定义,它不需要军队,但也考虑其他形式的冲突。我们主持了关于工业冲突(Saitta、Walker和Reckner 2005)、艺术历史分析(Ferris 2005;Parnell 2013;Breeze和Ferris 2016)、抗议活动(Fisher 2008)、二战中的林业营地(Sneddon 2008)、殖民冲突(Grguric 2009)、军事相关工业(Myles 2011)和文化资源管理(Banks和Pollard 2011;Van der Auwera 2012)的论文。虽然战场是冲突考古的主要研究领域,但冲突考古和战场考古并不是同义词。2017年2月在爱丁堡举行的“通过其他东西的战争”会议等举措的成功,催生了更多的研讨会和一系列即将出版的出版物,揭示了围绕冲突开展的丰富工作。引用WTOS网站:
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Editorial
The final issue of Volume 12 of this journal has a great deal more diversity than the two previous issues. One aspect of this diversity is geographical. In addition to a paper set in the United States (McNutt), there is a paper on South African (Mosothwane), and one on Kazakhstan (Arzhantseva & Tazhekeev). This is in contrast to the previous two issues whose papers have all been located in Europe. The geographical range is very welcome as a contrast to the previous issues, but there are other reasons for welcoming the three papers in this issue. There have been surprisingly few papers in the Journal on topics relating to the USA, so it is nice to have a paper to cover that area. South Africa has been little served, either, with a paper in the first volume of the Journal in 2005, and nothing since then. Kazakhstan is an entirely new frontier, a place that has not been covered by the Journal at all. It is very welcome to have such diversity of locations in the Journal and emphasises the fact that conflict archaeology is being undertaken across the world. The geographical locations are matched by the fact that, with the exception of McNutt, the authors are from outwith the mainstream Anglo-American conflict community that is so apparent at Fields of Conflict every 2 years. Having a Botswanan and two Kazakhs as authors does something to redress the balance of nationalities reported at the last Fields of Conflict conference, where British and American authors vastly outweighed the other nationalities. Conflict archaeology is a vibrant field of study, and the previous issues in the volume emphasised this with their European focus. It is useful to be reminded of the wider interest in conflict beyond Europe and America, however. There is a tendency amongst many outside the field to assume that conflict archaeology is mainly about battlefields, and if not battlefields, then perhaps military installations. However, as we made very clear at the start of the Journal in 2015, the concept of conflict archaeology guiding the Journal of Conflict Archaeology is a broad definition of conflict that does not require armies but looks at other forms of conflict as well. We have hosted papers on industrial conflict (Saitta, Walker, and Reckner 2005), art historical analysis (Ferris 2005; Parnell 2013; Breeze & Ferris 2016), protest activism (Fisher 2008), forestry camps in WWII (Sneddon 2008), colonial conflict (Grguric 2009), military-related industry (Myles 2011), and cultural resource management (Banks and Pollard 2011; Van der Auwera 2012). While battlefields are a major area of research in conflict archaeology, conflict archaeology and battlefield archaeology are not synonymous. The success of initiatives such as the War Through Other Stuff conference in February 2017 in Edinburgh, which has given birth to further workshops and a range of forthcoming publications, reveals the richness of work being carried out around conflict in general. Quoting from the WTOS website:
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
50.00%
发文量
8
期刊介绍: The Journal of Conflict Archaeology is an English-language journal devoted to the battlefield and military archaeology and other spheres of conflict archaeology, covering all periods with a worldwide scope. Additional spheres of interest will include the archaeology of industrial and popular protest; contested landscapes and monuments; nationalism and colonialism; class conflict; the origins of conflict; forensic applications in war-zones; and human rights cases. Themed issues will carry papers on current research; subject and period overviews; fieldwork and excavation reports-interim and final reports; artifact studies; scientific applications; technique evaluations; conference summaries; and book reviews.
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