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DOI: 10.1177/1461957107077704 Phenomenology in Practice: Towards a p Methodology for a `Subjective' ApproachUniversity College London, UK, s.hamilton{at}ucl.ac.uk
University College London, UK, r.whitehouse{at}ucl.ac.uk
University of Manchester, UK, keri.brown{at}manchester.ac.uk
Freelance archaeologist
University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland, edward.herring{at}nuigalway.ie
Freelance archaeologist, mst.artefactservices{at}virgin.net The article deals with the practice of phenomenological archaeological fieldwork, which is concerned with sensory experience of landscapes and locales. Phenomenological approaches in archaeology have cast light on aspects of past human experience not addressed by traditional archaeological methods. So far, however, they have neither developed explicit methodologies nor a discussion of methodological practice and have laid themselves open to accusations of being `subjective' and `unscientific'. This article describes and explores three experiments in phenomenological archaeology developed in the context of the TavoliereGargano Prehistory Project and carried out on Neolithic settlement sites of the type known as villaggi trincerati. Our aims are both to develop explicit methods for this type of fieldwork and to combine phenomenology with other more traditional approaches, such as those concerned with technological, economic and environmental aspects of landscapes and sites. Our work also differs from other phenomenological archaeology in its concern with familiar, everyday experience and domestic contexts, rather than exceptional, special experience in ritual contexts. We consider how our particular approach might be used to further understandings of past lives.
Key Words: graphic representation landscape Neolithic phenomenology site catchment analysis sound Tavoliere villaggi trincerati vision
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