Encountering Material Culture Through Archaeological Fiction: Wonderful Things in Literature, Film and Media
By (Author) Dr Kerry Dodd
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
12th December 2024
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Archaeology
Material culture
Film, television, radio genres: Action, adventure, crime and thrillers
809.39358
Hardback
280
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
Investigating the representation of artefacts, objects and things in a range of predominantly Western archaeological fiction from the late Victorian period to the modern day, this book examines the narratives through which humanity represents its own material heritage in relation to notions of enchantment, exhibition, estrangement, adventure, tourism and waste. Kerry Dodd asserts that comprehending the structures through which material culture is presented within archaeological media reveals the structures that transform an object from rubbish to relic. Calling upon such indicative literature, films, TV series and video games as Tomb Raider, Indiana Jones, Uncharted and Relic Hunter, this book explores the depiction of material culture through three principal areas relics, exhibition and adventure. Outlining a critical framework of artefact representation, Dodd argues that such iconic moments as Howard Carters remark that he saw wonderful things when he broke into the antechamber of Tutankhamuns tomb remain recognisable through the evocation of a spectacular visual, despite little concrete definition of the objects witnessed. This book offers a unique exploration of how such figures as Indiana Jones, Lara Croft and Carter have cemented a cultural recognition of what an artefact constitutes as being dependent on how an object is encountered. It is through the very wonder of things that Dodd breaks down the boundaries between popular and professional archaeology by pushing forward critical considerations of material culture.
Kerry Dodd is an Independent Scholar affiliated with Lancaster University, UK, where he completed his PhD. He is Co-head Editor of Fantastika Journal and his recent publications include: a chapter on glitches, errors and technological fear in Investigating Stranger Things (2021), an article on narrative archaeology in Studies in Gothic Fiction (2021), and a chapter on artefacts in Excavating Indiana Jones (2020).