Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-m6dg7 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-10T17:38:54.619Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Archaeology and education in Australia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

Sarah Colley*
Affiliation:
School of Archaeology, Building A14, University of Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia, sarah.colley@archaeology.usyd.edu.au

Abstract

Aboriginal, Historical and Maritime archaeology have been taught in Australian universities since the 1960s, and archaeology has made major contributions to our understanding of Australia's past. Yet many Australians are still more interested in archaeology overseas than in Australia itself. This partly reflects Australia's history as a former British colony which currently has a minority of indigenous Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, many of whom regard archaeology as yet another colonial imposition which at best is largely irrelevant to their own understanding of their history. Present government policies empower Aboriginal people to veto certain kinds of archaeological research they do not agree with. At minimum this may require archaeologists to engage in what can become protracted consultation, with uncertain outcomes.

Type
Special section: Archaeology in education
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd. 2000

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Barlow, A. 1990. Still civilizing? Aborigines in Australian education, in Stone, P. & Mackenzie, R. (ed.), The excluded past. Archaeology in education: 6887. London: Unwin Hyman.Google Scholar
Colley, S. 1996. Caught in the web: Cultural policy, cultural places and Australian archaeology, Culture and Policy 7(2): 14154.Google Scholar
Connah, G. 1998. Pattern and purpose in Historical Archaeology, Australasian Historical Archaeology 16: 37.Google Scholar
Cremin, A. (ed.). 1988. The enduring past. Archaeology of the ancient world for Australians. Sydney: New South Wales University Press.Google Scholar
Davidson, I., Lovell-Jones, C. & Bancroft, R.. 1995. Archaeologists and Aborigines working together. Annidale: University of New England Press.Google Scholar
Egloff, B. 1994. From Swiss Family Robinson to Sir Russell Drysdale: Towards changing the tone of historical archaeology in Australia, Australian Archaeology 39: 18.Google Scholar
Feary, S. 1994. Teaching and research in archaeology: some statistics, Australian Archaeology 39:1302.Google Scholar
Field, J., Colley, S. Barker, J. Barker, R. Coffey, E. Coffey, L. Crawford, E. Darcy, L. Fields, T. Lord, G. & Steadman, B.S. In press. Coming back – Aborigines and archaeologists at Cuddie Springs, Public Archaeology 1.Google Scholar
Finkel, E. 1998. University funding feels the big chill, Science 280 (29 May): 13423.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Flood, J. 1995. Archaeology of the Dreamtime. The story of prehistoric Australia and its people. Revised edition. Sydney: Angus & Robertson.Google Scholar
Frankel, D. 1991. Remains to be seen. Archaeological insights into Australian prehistory. Melbourne: Longman Cheshire.Google Scholar
Godden Mackay, Logan & Karskens, G.. 1999. The Cumberland/ Gloucester Streets site, The Rocks. Archaeological Investigation Report, volumes I-IV. Sydney: Godden Mackay Logan Pty. Ltd. Heritage Consultants.Google Scholar
Godden Mackay Pit Ltd & Austral Archaeology Pty Ltd. 1997. Prince of Wales Project 1995. Randwick Destitute Children’s Asylum Cemetery. Archaeological Investigation. 3 volumes. Report prepared for South Eastern Sydney Area Health Service, Heritage Council of NSW and the NSW Department of Health.Google Scholar
Godden Magkay Pty Ltd & Karskens, G.. 1996. The Cumberland Street/Gloucester Street Archaeological Investigation. 6 volumes. Report prepared for the Sydney Cove Authority & the Heritage Council of New South Wales, Sydney.Google Scholar
Historic Houses Trust Of New South Wales. 1996. Sites. Nailing the Debate: Archaeology and Interpretation in Museums. Sydney: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales.Google Scholar
Jones, C. 1997. Between a rock and a hard place, The Bulletin (May 6): 245.Google Scholar
Karskens, G. 1999. Inside the Rocks. The archaeology of a neighbourhood. Sydney: Hale & Iremonger.Google Scholar
Lawless, J., Cameron, K. & Young, C.. 1996. Unlocking the past. Preliminary studies in the Ancient World. Melbourne: Thomas Nelson Australia.Google Scholar
Mackay, R. & Karskens, G.. 1999. Historical archaeology in Australia: historical or hysterical? Crisis or creative awakening? Australasian Historical Archaeology 17: 11015.Google Scholar
Mcbryde, I. 1986. Australia’s once and future archaeology, Archaeology in Oceania 21: 1328.Google Scholar
Mulvaney, I. 1996. ‘Musing amidst the ruins...’, Australasian Historical Archaeology 14: 38.Google Scholar
Mulvaney, J. & Kamminga, J.. 1999. Prehistory of Australia. Sydney: Allen & Unwin.Google Scholar
Murray, T. & Allen, J.. 1995. The forced repatriation of cultural properties to Tasmania, Antiquity 69: 8714.Google Scholar
National Board Of Employment, Education And Training (NBEET). 1994. Review of Grant Outcomes No. 15. Classics, Classical Archaeology and Prehistory 1986–1990, Australian Research Council Evaluation Program. Canberra: Australian Government Printing Service.Google Scholar
Nicholson, H. 1999. Review of Experience archaeologyhy Louise Zannati and Aedeen Cremin, Teaching History 33: 1012.Google Scholar
Pardoe, C. 1990. Sharing the past: Aboriginal influence on archaeological practice, a case study from New South Wales, Aboriginal History 14: 20823.Google Scholar
Pardoe, C. 1992. Arches of radii, corridors of power: reflections on current archaeological practice, in Attwood, B. & Arnold, J. (ed.), Power, knowledge and Aborigines: 13241. Melbourne: La Trobe University Press.Google Scholar
Proudfoot, H., Bickford, A. Egloff, B. & Stocks, R.. 1991. Australia’s First Government House. Sydney: Allen & Unwin.Google Scholar
Tasmanian Aboriginal Land Council (TALC). 1996. Will you take the next step? in Ulm, S. Lilley, I. & Ross, A. (ed.). Australian Archaeology ‘95. Proceedings of the 1995 Australian Archaeological Association Annual Conference: 293301. St Lucia QLD: Anthropology Museum, University of Queensland. Tempus 6.Google Scholar
Zarmati, L. & Cremin, A.. 1998. Experience archaeology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar