A Grammar of the Archaeological Record (Version 2, Beta release)

Introduction

Website overview

Giorgio Buccellati – January 2025

Semiotics

Preliminaries
Introduction
Epistemics articulating
knowledge
1. Organization DOM
2. Process 2.1. Disaggregate
Disentangling
disengage
extricate
diaarray
stratigraphy
2.2. Structuring typology
integrative
2.3. Re-structuring conservation MCV
presentation MPR
conveying
knowledge
3. Publication UGR
Hermeneutics appropriating
knowledge
Heritage MHR

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Preliminaries

     The contents of this section follow a format that is similar for all websites in the system, described in UGR website:
  • utilities,
  • editorial,

     The details for a hands-on operation of the system are given in the Digital Operation Manual.

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Introduction

The concept of grammar as applied to archaeology is discussed here in detail.

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Grammar — OMIT

     A description of the critical elements that constitute the grammar as a system.
  • The constituents are the building blocks of the system, and they are defined by sets of reciprocal oppositions.
  • The specifics of what each constituent actually is are found in a categorization system that defines variables and variants.
  • A particular aspect of the archaeological record is the close interaction between the constituents and the archive structure.

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Epistemics

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Organization

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Process

     A grammar is a tool of choice for articulating and conveying knowledge, the two main characteristics of epistemics. It is in this light that I view the archaeological record, from three distinct points of view:
  • the matrix: how the data are first found in their disaggregated state within the grip of the soil;
  • the structuring: how the data are then assembled independently of the excavation process;
  • the re-structuring: how the data are finally preserved and presented.

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Hermeneutics

Hermeneutics may be seen as the search for meaning and for values: the knowledge which epistemics has articulated and conveyed is now received as a springboard for the appropriation of what stands behind the known, what triggered originally a response and can do so again for us today.

The role of hermeneutics at the time of excavation is limited, but important, and attention for the “inheritors” must be inscribed already at the level of grammatical analysis.

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References

A list of the bibliographical references used in the text, with links to the places where they occur.

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