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8 - Artefacts from the battlefield

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 December 2015

Antonio Sagona
Affiliation:
University of Melbourne
Jessie Birkett-Rees
Affiliation:
Monash University (Melbourne)
Michelle Negus Cleary
Affiliation:
University of Sydney
Simon Harrington
Affiliation:
The Royal Australian Naval College
Mithat Atabay
Affiliation:
Çanakkale Onsekiz Mart Üniversitesi
Reyhan Körpe
Affiliation:
18 March University
Muhammet Erat
Affiliation:
18 March University
Antonio Sagona
Affiliation:
University of Melbourne
Mithat Atabay
Affiliation:
Çanakkale Onsekiz Mart Üniversitesi
C. J. Mackie
Affiliation:
La Trobe University, Victoria
Ian McGibbon
Affiliation:
Ministry of Culture and Heritage, Wellington
Richard Reid
Affiliation:
Department of Veteran Affairs
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Summary

Material culture does not just exist. It is made by someone. It is produced to do something. Therefore it does not passively reflect society – rather, it creates society through the action of individuals.

Hodder & Hutson, Reading the Past, p. 6.

The things humankind makes and uses at any particular time and place are probably the truest representation we have of values and meaning within a society.

Kingery, Learning from Things, p. ix.

We live in a world of material things. Objects that we have manufactured (artefacts) and structures that we have built envelope our daily existence. They constitute the tangible and tactile expressions of our contemporary society, as they did for all past human communities. As such, artefacts reveal much about our thoughts and our actions. They inform on our preferences and purchasing power, our cultural affiliations and travels, and our stage of life and gender. In other words, artefacts have the potential to group people with something in common. Artefacts fill museums around the world, and together with standing monuments, they form a major component of the public face of archaeology. The rationale behind the study of artefacts in archaeology, then, can be easily understood. As objects made and used by people, they play a central role in a discipline that is concerned with material culture and how it can be utilised to make sense of human behaviour and achievements.

How far we can approach the ‘true’ meaning of material culture has been much debated, and need not detain us here. Suffice to say that, as evidence from the past, objects are worthy of study in themselves. For many, though, artefacts are seen as ‘fossils’: static and mute expressions of past actions, which are often displayed in serried ranks in a museum. This method is of limited value, for it obscures the cultural biography of an archaeological object, which has its own history of creation, use, deposition, post-deposition and recovery. We explained our project's recovery system in chapter 5. Here we touch on the first three stages of the lifecycle of the JHAS artefacts, although not with the same level of attention.

Type
Chapter
Information
Anzac Battlefield
A Gallipoli Landscape of War and Memory
, pp. 159 - 191
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2016

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