Compressed Air Technology in Swedish Archaeology: An Example of the Social Construction of Technology in Practice
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.37718/CSA.2006.03Keywords:
Archaeological practice, archaeological fieldwork, history of archaeology, Science and Technology Studies, gender and practice, Actor Network TheoryAbstract
In this paper the authors problematize the relation between technological and social aspects of archaeological fieldwork through a historical case study of the introduction and use of compressed air technology in archaeology. They do this by incorporating aspects of Science and Technology Studies (STS) and Actor Network Theory (ANT) into the history of archaeology. Apart from archive material, fieldwork reports and interviews with colleagues have been the primary sources. The study shows how technology is negotiated and renegotiated, and how the technical and the social form each other. Finally, the authors draw attention to issues of technological development in the present.
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