Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2brh9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-26T01:50:04.475Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

‘The loss of innocence’ in historical perspective

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

Bruce G. Trigger*
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, McGill University, 855 Sherbrooke Street West, Montreal, Quebec, Canada H3A 2T7. [email protected]

Extract

The dual tasks of this paper are to examine David Clarke’s ideas about the development of archaeology as they relate both to the era when ‘the loss of innocence’ was written and to what has happened since. In his treatment of the history of archaeology offered in that essay, Clarke subscribed to at least two of the key tenets of the behaviourist and utilitarian approaches that dominated the social sciences in the 1960s: neoevolutionism and ecological determinism.

Clarke viewed the development of archaeology as following a unilinear sequence of stages from consciousness through self-consciousness to critical self-consciousness. The first stage began with archaeology defining its subject matter and what archaeologists do. As its database and the procedures required for studying it became more elaborate, self-conscious archaeology emerged as a ‘series of divergent and selfreferencing regional schools … with regionally esteemed bodies of archaeological theory and locally preferred forms of description, interpretation and explanation’ (Clarke 1973: 7). At the stage of critical self-consciousness, regionalism was replaced by a conviction that ‘archaeologists hold most of their problems in common and share large areas of general theory within a single discipline’ (1973: 7). Archaeology was now defined by ‘the characteristic forms of its reasoning, the intrinsic nature of its knowledge and information, and its competing theories of concepts and their relationships’ (1973: 7). Clarke looked forward to a fourth (and ultimate?) phase of self-critical self-consciousncss, when the new archaeology would monitor and control its own development.

Type
Special section: David Clarke's ‘Archaeology: the loss of innocence’ (1973) 25 years after
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd. 1998

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Childe, V.G. 1930. The Bronze Age. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Clark, J.G.D 1961. World prehistory: an outline. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Clarke, D.L. 1968. Analytical archaeology. London: Methuen.Google Scholar
Clarke, D.L. 1968. 1972. Review of Patty Jo Watson, Steven LeBlan, A. & Charles Redman, L. Explanation in archaeology: an explicitly scientifc approach (1971), Antiquity 46: 2379.Google Scholar
Clarke, D.L. 1973. Archaeology: the loss of innocence, Antiquity 47: 618.Google Scholar
Schiffer, M.B. 1976. Behavioral archeology. New York (NY): Academic Press.Google Scholar
Sherratt, A.G. 1979. Problems in European prehistory, in Hammon, N. et al. (ed.), Analytical archaeologist: collected papers of David L. Clarke: 193206. London: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Trigger, B.C. 1978. The strategy of Iroquoian prehistory, in Dunnel, R.C. & Hall, E.S. Jr. (ed.), Archaeological essays in honor of Irving B. Rouse: 275310. The Hague: Mouton.Google Scholar
Trigger, B.C. 1998. Archaeology and epistemology: dialoguing across the Darwinian chasm, American Journal of Archaeology 102: 134.Google Scholar