Archaeology dreaming

This article is concerned with the materiality of memory and identity in the post-colony, as mediated by the corporeal remains of the colonial underclasses themselves. Prestwich Street is in a rapidly gentrifying part of Cape Town, close to the Waterfront, the city’s glitzy international zone. The a...

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Published in:Journal of Social Archaeology
Main Author: Shepherd, Nick
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publications 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1469605307067842
http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/1469605307067842
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spelling crsagepubl:10.1177/1469605307067842 2024-09-15T18:06:46+00:00 Archaeology dreaming post-apartheid urban imaginaries and the bones of the Prestwich Street dead Shepherd, Nick 2007 http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1469605307067842 http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/1469605307067842 en eng SAGE Publications http://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license Journal of Social Archaeology volume 7, issue 1, page 3-28 ISSN 1469-6053 1741-2951 journal-article 2007 crsagepubl https://doi.org/10.1177/1469605307067842 2024-08-27T04:24:21Z This article is concerned with the materiality of memory and identity in the post-colony, as mediated by the corporeal remains of the colonial underclasses themselves. Prestwich Street is in a rapidly gentrifying part of Cape Town, close to the Waterfront, the city’s glitzy international zone. The accidental discovery of an early colonial burial site in Prestwich Street in the course of construction activities in May 2003, and its subsequent exhumation, became the occasion of a fiercely contested public campaign. This pitted pro-exhumation heritage managers, archaeologists and property developers against an alliance of community activists, spiritual leaders and First Nations representatives. The materiality of the site and its remains became a key point of focus for the working out of a range of forces and interests in post-apartheid society, including the buried legacies of slavery and colonialism in the city, the memory of apartheid forced removals, and post-apartheid struggles over restitution and representation. I argue that, even as the heightened political contexts of the events around Prestwich Street significantly determine the shape and nature of an emergent post-apartheid public sphere (on the one hand), on the other hand, its clashing epistemological and ontological concerns challenge us to rethink and reformulate core disciplinary practices and guiding ideas. Are the remains of the Prestwich Street dead artefacts? Or are they ancestors? And under what conditions might they be both of these things? Article in Journal/Newspaper First Nations SAGE Publications Journal of Social Archaeology 7 1 3 28
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language English
description This article is concerned with the materiality of memory and identity in the post-colony, as mediated by the corporeal remains of the colonial underclasses themselves. Prestwich Street is in a rapidly gentrifying part of Cape Town, close to the Waterfront, the city’s glitzy international zone. The accidental discovery of an early colonial burial site in Prestwich Street in the course of construction activities in May 2003, and its subsequent exhumation, became the occasion of a fiercely contested public campaign. This pitted pro-exhumation heritage managers, archaeologists and property developers against an alliance of community activists, spiritual leaders and First Nations representatives. The materiality of the site and its remains became a key point of focus for the working out of a range of forces and interests in post-apartheid society, including the buried legacies of slavery and colonialism in the city, the memory of apartheid forced removals, and post-apartheid struggles over restitution and representation. I argue that, even as the heightened political contexts of the events around Prestwich Street significantly determine the shape and nature of an emergent post-apartheid public sphere (on the one hand), on the other hand, its clashing epistemological and ontological concerns challenge us to rethink and reformulate core disciplinary practices and guiding ideas. Are the remains of the Prestwich Street dead artefacts? Or are they ancestors? And under what conditions might they be both of these things?
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Shepherd, Nick
spellingShingle Shepherd, Nick
Archaeology dreaming
author_facet Shepherd, Nick
author_sort Shepherd, Nick
title Archaeology dreaming
title_short Archaeology dreaming
title_full Archaeology dreaming
title_fullStr Archaeology dreaming
title_full_unstemmed Archaeology dreaming
title_sort archaeology dreaming
publisher SAGE Publications
publishDate 2007
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1469605307067842
http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/1469605307067842
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_source Journal of Social Archaeology
volume 7, issue 1, page 3-28
ISSN 1469-6053 1741-2951
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op_doi https://doi.org/10.1177/1469605307067842
container_title Journal of Social Archaeology
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