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A01=Bjornar Olsen
A01=Christopher Witmore
archaeological theory
Archaeology
archaeology and history
Archaeology of war
arctic archaeology
Author_Bjornar Olsen
Author_Christopher Witmore
Category=NK
Contemporary Archaeology
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
forthcoming
history
Object Memory
Patience
Post-history
Presence
Prisoners of War
Ruins
slow archaeology
Svaerholt
symmetrical archaeology
World War 2
WWII archaeology

Product details

  • ISBN 9798881805463
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 23 Jul 2026
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Unleash archaeology’s potential by turning toward pasts that resist historical time and reveal the power of an archaeology other than history.
History has long shaped our expectations of what the past is and how it should be recalled, written, and displayed. Thus while objects of all ages endure and accumulate around us—often broken and fragmented—we continue to interpret them through historical tropes of completion, succession, and replacement. What if we were to see this indiscriminate persistence and fragmentation not as archaeological defects to be mended by history and historical narration, but as material expressions suggestive of pasts other than history? What might these other pasts look like, and how might we account for them?

In this book, Bjørnar Olsen and Christopher Witmore pursue these questions. Drawing on more than a decade of fieldwork at Sværholt—an abandoned fishing hamlet, Wehrmacht artillery battery, and prisoner-of-war camp in Arctic Norway—they explore what difference archaeology can make when working with objects of war routinely saturated by history. Through meticulous material investigations, novel ways of writing, and striking imagery, the authors open glimpses onto the distinctive pasts that forgotten things remember. In attending to what endures above and below the surface, they also confront central challenges of archaeological thought and interpretation, developing new conceptions of presence, patience, and waiting. The result is a bold and compelling vision of what archaeology might yet become.

Bjørnar J. Olsen is Professor of Archaeology at UiT – The Arctic University of Norway.

Christopher Witmore is Professor of Archaeology at Texas Tech University, USA.

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