Stephanie Moser’s research while affiliated with University of Southampton and other places

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Publications (1)


On Disciplinary Culture: Archaeology as Fieldwork and Its Gendered Associations
  • Article

September 2007

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124 Reads

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91 Citations

Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory

Stephanie Moser

This paper discusses the disciplinary culture of archaeology, focusing in particular on the role of fieldwork in shaping the sense of identity for the profession. Based on the examination of the professionalisation of Australian archaeology, it is argued that there is a distinctive suite of attributes relating to the activity of fieldwork, which are central to the organizational culture of the discipline. These attributes can be seen to have a gendered dimension, revealing the extent to which archaeology is shaped by different gender regimes.

Citations (1)


... L e terrain est au coeur de la construction de l'identité professionnelle des archéologues et constitue un marqueur de leur adhésion à la communauté archéologique (Gero, 1994(Gero, et 1996Moser, 1996Moser, et 2007 : « L'archéologie est la fouille, ou elle n'est pas » (Gero, 1994, p. 38). Le statut d'archéologue s'acquiert encore avant tout par un passage sur le terrain, en contact direct avec les vestiges matériels, et même « les grands théoriciens […] doivent avoir fait leur apprentissage sur le terrain afin de se faire adouber » (Gero, 1994, p. 38). ...

Reference:

"On ne naît pas archéologue, on le devient" : Les femmes de terrain au sein de l’archéologie française : une perspective féministe
On Disciplinary Culture: Archaeology as Fieldwork and Its Gendered Associations
  • Citing Article
  • September 2007

Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory