Contained in:
  • Florentia
  • Edited by Michele Nucciotti, Elisa Pruno
Book Chapter

Site Custody Activism: Sine qua non dell’‘Archeologia di comunità’

  • Oystein La Bianca

My goal with this chapter is to share our experience at Tall Hisban in Jordan with what I have chosen to call site custody activism or simply SCA. After introducing the notion of SCA, I briefly examine the historical role of overseas institutions with regard to the custody and care of archaeological sites. Next, I describe SCA activities initiated by Andrews University at Hisban in Jordan and offer some observations on the connection between SCA and the broader field of international community development. I also critically examining the role of narrative in SCA and conclude by offering a brief coda on what’s ahead for community archaeology and SCA in Jordan and beyond.

  • Keywords:
  • Community archaeology,
  • Global history,
  • Cultural heritage management,
  • Hisban,
  • Jordan,
  • Site custody activism,
  • Site management,
+ Show More

Oystein La Bianca

University of St Andrews, United States - ORCID: 0000-0002-0286-3112

  1. Ababneh, Abdelkader. 2016. “Heritage Management and Interpretation: Challenges to Heritage Site-Based Values, Reflections from the Heritage Site of Umm Qais, Jordan.” Archaeologies 12 (1): 38–72.
  2. Ababneh, Abdelkader. 2018. “Tour Guides and Heritage Interpretation: Guides’ Interpretation of the Past at the Archaeological Site of Jarash, Jordan.” Journal of Heritage Tourism 13 (3): 257–72. DOI: 10.1007/s11759-016-9290-6
  3. Abdulkariem, Ahmad. 2013. “Involving the Local Community in the Protection of the Heritage and Archaeology of Cyrene.” Libyan Studies 44: 103.
  4. Abu‐Khafajah, Shatha. 2010. “Meaning‐making and Cultural Heritage in Jordan: The Local Community, the Contexts and the Archaeological Sites in Khreibt Al‐Suq.” International Journal of Heritage Studies 16 (1–2): 123–39.
  5. Acabado, Stephen, Marlon Martin, and Adam J. Lauer. 2014. “Rethinking History, Conserving Heritage.” SAA Archaeological Record. DOI: 10.1017/S0263718900009699
  6. Al Quntar, Salam, Katharyn Hanson, Brian I. Daniels, and Corine Wegener, 2015b. “Responding to a Cultural Heritage Crisis: The Example of the Safeguarding the Heritage of Syria and Iraq Project.” Near Eastern Archaeology 78 (3): 154–60. DOI: 10.5615/neareastarch.78.3.0154
  7. Al Quntar, Salam, Katharyn Hanson, Brian I. Daniels, and Corine Wegener. 2015a. “Responding to a Cultural Heritage Crisis.” NEAR EASTERN ARCHAEOLOGY 78 (3): 155.
  8. Arbagi, Martin. 1984. “Hunt, ED," Holy Land Pilgrimage in the Later Roman Empire, AD 312-460"(Book Review).” The Historian 46 (3): 430.
  9. Atalay, Sonya. 2012. Community-Based Archaeology: Research with, by, and for Indigenous and Local Communities. Univ of California Press.
  10. Baram, U., and L. Carroll. 2006. A Historical Archaeology of the Ottoman Empire: Breaking New Ground. Springer US. https://books.google.com/books?id=DpkyBwAAQBAJ.
  11. Belich, James, John Darwin, Margret Frenz, and Chris Wickham. 2016. The Prospect of Global History. Oxford University Press.
  12. Bhambra, Gurminder K. 2013. “The Possibilities of, and for, Global Sociology: A Postcolonial Perspective.” Political Power and Social Theory 24: 295–314. DOI: 10.16995/TRAC2007_75_88
  13. Boytner, Ran, Lynn Swartz Dodd, and Bradley J. Parker. 2010. Controlling the Past, Owning the Future: The Political Uses of Archaeology in the Middle East. University of Arizona Press.
  14. Clark, Douglas R., and Victor H. Matthews. 2003. One Hundred Years of American Archaeology in the Middle East: Proceedings of the American Schools of Oriental Research Centennial Celebration, Washington DC, April 2000. American Schools of Oriental Research.
  15. Crossley, Pamela Kyle. 2008. What Is Global History. Polity.
  16. Crutzen, Paul J. 2006. “The ‘Anthropocene.’” In Earth System Science in the Anthropocene, 13–18. Springer.
  17. De Cesari, Chiara, 2012. “Thinking through Heritage Regimes.” Heritage Regimes and the State 6: 399–413. DOI: 10.1111/j.1548-1433.2010.01280.x
  18. De Cesari, Chiara, 2014, 2014. “World Heritage and the Nation-State: A View from Palestine.” Transnational Memory: Circulation, Articulation, Scales, Berlin: De Gruyter, 247–70.
  19. De Cesari, Chiara, 2019. Heritage and the Cultural Struggle for Palestine. Stanford University Press. DOI: 10.1515/9783110359107.247
  20. De Cesari, Chiara. 2010. “Creative Heritage: Palestinian Heritage NGOs and Defiant Arts of Government.” American Anthropologist 112 (4): 625–37. DOI: 10.5615/neareastarch.78.3.0154
  21. Drap, Pierre, Djamal Merad, Jean-Marc Boï, Julien Seinturier, Daniela Peloso, Christophe Reidinger, Guido Vannini, Michele Nucciotti, and Elisa Pruno. 2012. “Photogrammetry for Medieval Archaeology: A Way to Represent and Analyse Stratigraphy.” In 2012 18th International Conference on Virtual Systems and Multimedia, 157–64. IEEE.
  22. Fenwick, Corisande. 2007. “Archaeology and the Search for Authenticity: Colonialist, Nationalist and Berberist Visions of an Algerian Past.” Fenwick, C. et Al, 75–88. DOI: 10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199987870.013.25
  23. Gorjestani, Nicolas. 2001. “Indigenous Knowledge for Development: Opportunities and Challenges.” DOI: 10.1002/jtr.620
  24. Halevi, Masha. 2012. “Between Faith and Science: Franciscan Archaeology in the Service of the Holy Places.” Middle Eastern Studies 48 (2): 249–67.
  25. Khrawish, Husni Ali. 2014. “The Effect of Economic and Financial Risks on Foreign Direct Investment in Jordan: Multivariate Analysis.” International Business Research 7 (5): 124. DOI: 10.1108/S0198-8719(2013)0000024017
  26. King, Philip J. 1983. American Archaeology in the Mideast: A History of the American Schools of Oriental Research. Sheffield Academic Pr.
  27. Kirk, Martha Ann. 2004. Women of Bible Lands: A Pilgrimage to Compassion and Wisdom. Liturgical Press.
  28. La Bianca, Oystein S., 2017. “Community Archaeology at Tall Hisban.” Andrews Univeristy Seminary Studies 55 (1).
  29. LaBianca Oystein S., 1995. “On-Site Rainwater Harvesting to Achieve Household Water Security among Rural and Peri-Urban Communities in Jordan.” In Studies in the History and Archaeology of Jordan IX. Vol. 5. Amman, Jordan: Department of Antiquities.
  30. LaBianca, Oystein S, and Sandra Arnold Scham. 2006. Connectivity in Antiquity: Globalization as a Long-Term Historical Process. Equinox Publishing Limited.
  31. LaBianca, Oystein S. , 2021b. “Chapter 5 Drivers of Accumulative Cultural  Production in the Southern Levant The View from Tall Hisban, Jordan.” In Levantine Entanglements, 146–88. Sheffield, UK: Equinox Pub. DOI: 10.1177/20530196145647
  32. LaBianca, Oystein S. 1990. Hesban 1 Sedentarization and Nomadization: Food System Cycles at Hesban and Vicinity in Transjordan. Hesban Final Publication Series 1. Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews University Press.
  33. LaBianca, Oystein S. 2021a, Chapter 3: Lenses on Accumulative Cultural  Production in the Southern Levant Toward a Middle Range Interpretive Methodology, In Levantine Entanglements, 46–77. Sheffield, UK: Equinox Pub.
  34. LaBianca, Øystein S., Maria Elena Ronza, and Noël Harris. 2021. “Community Archaeology in the Islamic World.” The Oxford Handbook of Islamic Archaeology. January 14, 2021.
  35. LaBianca, Øystein Sakala, and María Elena Ronza. 2018. “Narrating Contested Pasts: Lessons Learned at Tall Hisban.” Annual of the Department of Antiquities of Jordan 59: 623–30.
  36. LaBianca, Øystein Sakala, Paul J. Ray Jr, and Fawzi Zayadine. 1999. “Madaba Plains Project 1997. Excavations and Restoration Work at Tall Ḥisban and Vicinity.” Annual of the Department of Antiquities of Jordan 43: 115–25. DOI: 10.1086/589266
  37. Marshall, Jill E. 2011. “The Agency of Women in Curating the Christian Holy Land.” In Levantine Entanglements: Cultural Productions, Long-Term Changes and Globalizations in the Eastern Mediterranean Edited by Terje Stordalen and Oystein S. LaBianca, 400–423. Sheffield, UK: Equinox Publishing Limited.
  38. Mazlish, Bruce. 1998. “Comparing Global History to World History.” Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 385–95.
  39. Moskalenko, Andrii. 2020. “AN ARCHAEOLOGICAL EXPEDITION AS A CULTURAL PHENOMENON (SOME THEORETICAL ASPECTS).” European Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences, no. 6: 33–36.
  40. Norderval, Oyvind. 2021. “The Production of the Constantinian Holy Land.” In Levantine Entanglements: Cultural Productions, Long-Term Changes and Globalizations in the Eastern Mediterranean Edited by Terje Stordalen and Oystein S. LaBainca, 376–99. Sheffield, UK: Equinox Publishing Limited.
  41. Porter, Benjamin W. 2010. : “: Near Eastern Archaeology: Imperial Pasts, Postcolonial Presents, And.” In Handbook of Postcolonial Archaeology. Routledge. DOI: 10.1515/9781503609396
  42. Pringle, Denys. 2016. Pilgrimage to Jerusalem and the Holy Land, 1187–1291. Routledge.
  43. Ritsema van Eck, Marianne Petra. 2017. Custodians of Sacred Space: Constructing the Franciscan Holy Land through Texts and Sacri Monti (ca. 1480-1650).
  44. Rogers, Stephanie Stidham. 2011. Inventing the Holy Land: American Protestant Pilgrimage to Palestine, 1865–1941. Lexington Books.
  45. Roncaglia, Martiniano. 1950. “The Sons of St. Francis in the Holy Land.” Franciscan Studies 10 (3): 257–85. DOI: 10.1558/equinox.41363
  46. Ronza, Maria Elena. 2016. “Building Awareness: The Challenge of Cultural Community Engagement in Petra—The Temple of the Winged Lions Cultural Resource Management Initiative.” Studies in the History and Archaeology of Jordan 12: 617–24. DOI: 10.1080/1743873X.2017.1321003
  47. Said, Edward. 1979. Orientalism. 1978. Reprint. New York: Vintage Books.
  48. Schafer, Wolf. 2003. “The New Global History: Toward a Narrative for Pangaea Two.” EWE (Previously EuS) 14.
  49. Schmidt, P., and I. Pikirayi. 2016. Community Archaeology and Heritage in Africa: Decolonizing Practice. Taylor & Francis. https://books.google.com/books?id=mBpqDAAAQBAJ.
  50. Shunnaq, Mohammed, William A. Schwab, and Margaret F. Reid. 2008. “Community Development Using a Sustainable Tourism Strategy: A Case Study of the Jordan River Valley Touristway.” International Journal of Tourism Research 10 (1): 1–14. DOI: 10.5539/ibr.v7n5p124
  51. Steen, Danielle, Jennifer Jacobs, Benjamin Porter, and Bruce Routledge. 2010. “Exploring Heritage Discourses in Central Jordan.” Controlling the Past, Owning the Future: The Political Uses of Archaeology in the Middle East, Edited by Ran Boytner, Lynn Swartz Dodd, and Bradley J. Parker. University of Arizona Press, Tucson, 159–77. DOI: 10.1080/13527250903441820
  52. Steffen, Will, Wendy Broadgate, Lisa Deutsch, Owen Gaffney, and Cornelia Ludwig. 2015. “The Trajectory of the Anthropocene: The Great Acceleration.” The Anthropocene Review 2 (1): 81–98.
  53. Vannini, Guido. 2011. “A Medieval Archaeology Experience in Jordan. The ‘Medieval’Petra Mission of University of Florence.” Annual of the Department of Antiquities of Jordan 55: 295–312.
PDF
  • Publication Year: 2024
  • Pages: 327-344
  • Content License: CC BY 4.0
  • © 2024 Author(s)

XML
  • Publication Year: 2024
  • Content License: CC BY 4.0
  • © 2024 Author(s)

Chapter Information

Chapter Title

Site Custody Activism: Sine qua non dell’‘Archeologia di comunità’

Authors

Oystein La Bianca

Language

Italian

DOI

10.36253/979-12-215-0376-0.24

Peer Reviewed

Publication Year

2024

Copyright Information

© 2024 Author(s)

Content License

CC BY 4.0

Metadata License

CC0 1.0

Bibliographic Information

Book Title

Florentia

Book Subtitle

Studi di archeologia: vol. 5 - Numero speciale - Studi in onore di Guido Vannini

Editors

Michele Nucciotti, Elisa Pruno

Peer Reviewed

Number of Pages

596

Publication Year

2024

Copyright Information

© 2024 Author(s)

Content License

CC BY 4.0

Metadata License

CC0 1.0

Publisher Name

Firenze University Press

DOI

10.36253/979-12-215-0376-0

ISBN Print

979-12-215-0375-3

eISBN (pdf)

979-12-215-0376-0

Series Title

Strumenti per la didattica e la ricerca

Series ISSN

2704-6249

Series E-ISSN

2704-5870

19

Fulltext
downloads

48

Views

Export Citation

1,351

Open Access Books

in the Catalogue

2,338

Book Chapters

3,870,371

Fulltext
downloads

4,488

Authors

from 932 Research Institutions

of 65 Nations

65

scientific boards

from 348 Research Institutions

of 43 Nations

1,248

Referees

from 380 Research Institutions

of 38 Nations