This essay explores the scope for greater engagement between human geographers and archaeologists, by taking a first step towards identifying convergences in theoretical development and possible topics for dialogue. Focusing on cultural geography and contemporary archaeology, I examine the changing role of matter and time within the field of archaeology. In doing so, I reflect on the opportunities for dialogue that are opened up as archaeologists rethink a series of ideas that have for many years remained fundamental to archaeological endeavour.
AlbertiB (2001) Faience goddesses and ivory bull-leapers: The aesthetics of sexual difference at late Bronze Age Knossos. World Archaeology33(2): 189–205.
2.
AlbertiB (2002) Gender and the figurative art of late Bronze Age Knossos. In: HamilakisY (ed.) Labyrinth Revisited: Rethinking ‘Minoan’ Archaeology. Oxford: Oxbow Books, 98–119.
3.
AlbertiBMarshallY (2009) Animating archaeology: Local theories and conceptually open-ended methodologies. Cambridge Archaeological Journal19(3): 344–356.
4.
AndersonBHarrisonP (2010) The promise of non-representational theories. In: AndersonBHarrisonP (eds) Taking Place: Non-Representational Theories and Geography. Farnham: Ashgate, 1–34.
5.
AndersonBWylieJ (2009) On geography and materiality. Environment and Planning A41(2): 318–335.
6.
AndersonBKearnesMDoubledayR (2007) Geographies of nano-technoscience. Area39(2): 139–142.
7.
BaileyG (1981) Concepts, timescales and explanations in economic prehistory. In: SheridanABaileyG (eds) Economic Archaeology. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, 97–117.
8.
BaileyG (1983) Concepts of time in Quaternary prehistory. Annual Review of Anthropology12: 165–192.
9.
BaradK (2003) Posthumanist performativity: How matter comes to matter. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society28(3): 801–831.
10.
BaradK (2007) Meeting the Universe Halfway: Quantum Physics and the Entanglement of Matter and Meaning. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
11.
BeekmanCSBadenWW (eds) (2005) Nonlinear Models for Archaeology and Anthropology: Continuing The Revolution. Aldershot: Ashgate.
12.
BennettJ (2001) The Enchantment of Modern Life: Attachments, Crossings, and Ethics. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
13.
BennettJ (2010) Vibrant Matter: A Political Ecology of Things. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
14.
BinfordL (1962) Archaeology as anthropology. American Antiquity28(2): 217–225.
15.
BinghamNHinchliffeS (2008) Reconstituting natures: Articulating other modes of living together. Geoforum39(1): 83–87.
16.
BintliffJ (1997) Catastrophe, chaos, and complexity: The death, decay, and rebirth of towns from antiquity to today. Journal of European Archaeology52: 67–90.
17.
BolgerD (ed.) (2013) A Companion to Gender Prehistory. Chichester: Wiley.
18.
BraudelF (1972) The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in The Age of Philip II, translated by ReynoldsS.New York: Harper and Row.
19.
BraudelF (1980) On History, translated by MatthewsS.Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.
20.
BrückJ (2005) Experiencing the past? The development of phenomenological archaeology in British Prehistory. Archaeological Dialogues12(1): 47–72.
21.
BuchliV (ed.) (2002) The Material Culture Reader. Oxford: Berg.
22.
BuchliVLucasG (eds) (2001a) Archaeologies of the Contemporary Past. London: Routledge.
23.
BuchliVLucasG (2001b) The archaeology of alienation: A late twentieth-century British council house. In: BuchliVLucasG (eds) Archaeologies of the Contemporary Past. London: Routledge, 158–167.
24.
BuchliVLucasG (2001c) The absent present. In: BuchliVLucasG (eds) Archaeologies of the Contemporary Past. London: Routledge, 3–18.
25.
ButtimerA (1976) Grasping the dynamism of the lifeworld. Annals of the Association of American Geographers66: 277–292.
26.
ButtimerASeamonD (eds) (1980) The Human Experience of Space and Place. London: Croom Helm.
27.
ChildeVG (1951) Social Evolution. London: Watts and Co.
28.
ChorleyRHaggettP (eds) (1967) Models in Geography. London: Methuen.
29.
ClarkeD (ed.) (1972) Models in Archaeology. London: Methuen.
30.
ConkeyMSpectorJ (1984) Archaeology and the study of gender. Advances in Archaeological Method and Theory7: 1–38.
31.
CrangMATolia-KellyDP (2010) Nation, race and affect: Senses and sensibilities at national heritage sites. Environment and Planning A42: 2315–2331.
CummingsV (2002a) Between mountains and sea: A reconsideration of the Neolithic monuments of south-west Scotland. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society68: 125–146.
34.
CummingsV (2002b) Experiencing texture and transformation in the British Neolithic. Oxford Journal of Archaeology21(3): 249–261.
35.
CummingsVWhittleA (2003) Tombs with a view: Landscape, monuments and trees. Antiquity77(296): 255–266.
36.
DarwinCR (1859) The Origin of the Species by means of Natural Selection. London: John Murray.
37.
DeetzJ (1977) In Small Things Forgotten: An Archaeology of Early American Life. New York: Anchor Books.
38.
De LandaM (1997) A Thousand Years of Nonlinear History. New York: Zone Books.
39.
DeleuzeGGuattariF (2004 [1988]) A Thousand Plateaus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia, translated by MassumiB.London: Continuum.
40.
DeMarraisEGosdenCRenfrewC (2004) Substance, Memory and Display: Archaeology and Art. Cambridge: McDonald Monograph Series.
41.
DerridaJ (1994) Spectres of Marx, translated by KamufP.London: Routledge.
42.
DeSilveyC (2006) Observed decay: Telling stories with mutable things. Journal of Material Culture11(3): 318–338.
43.
DeSilveyC (2007) Salvage memory: Constellating material histories on a hardscrabble homestead. Cultural Geographies14(3): 401–424.
44.
DeSilveyCEdensorT (2013) Reckoning with ruins. Progress in Human Geography37
(4): 465–485.
45.
EdensorT (2005a) The ghosts of industrial ruins: Ordering and disordering memory in excessive space. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space23(6): 829–849.
46.
EdensorT (2005b) Waste matter – the debris of industrial ruins and the disordering of the material world: The materialities of industrial ruins. Journal of Material Culture10(3): 311–332.
47.
EdensorT (2005c) Industrial Ruins: Space, Aesthetics and Materiality. Oxford: Berg.
48.
GeroJConkeyM (eds) (1991) Engendering Archaeology: Women and Prehistory. Oxford: Blackwell.
49.
GilchristR (1999) Gender and Archaeology: Contesting the Past. London: Routledge.
50.
GilchristR (2013) Gender and Material Culture. Abingdon: Routledge.
51.
González-RuibalA (2006) The past is tomorrow: Towards an archaeology of the vanishing present. Norwegian Archaeological Review39(2): 110–125.
52.
González-RuibalA (2007) Making things public: Archaeologies of the Spanish Civil War. Public Archaeology6(4): 259–282.
53.
González-RuibalA (2008) Time to destroy: An archaeology of supermodernity. Current Anthropology49(2): 247–279.
54.
González-RuibalA (2011) Digging Franco’s trenches: An archaeological investigation of a Nationalist position from the Spanish Civil War. Journal of Conflict Archaeology6(2): 96–122.
55.
González-RuibalA (2012) From the battlefield to the labor camp: Archaeology of civil war and dictatorship in Spain. Antiquity86: 456–473.
56.
González-RuibalASahleYAyán VilaX (2011) A social archaeology of colonial war in Ethiopia. World Archaeology43(1): 40–65.
57.
GosdenC (2001) Postcolonial archaeology: Issues of culture, identity and knowledge. In: HodderI (ed.) Archaeological Theory Today. Oxford: Polity Press/Blackwell, 241–261.
58.
GosdenC (2005) What do objects want?Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory12(3): 193–211.
59.
GosdenCKnowlesC (2001) Collecting Colonialism: Material Culture and Colonial Change. Oxford: Berg.
60.
GosdenCMarshallY (1999) The cultural biography of objects. World Archaeology31(2): 169–178.
61.
GouldRASchifferMB (eds) (1981) Modern Material Culture: The Archaeology of Us. New York: Academic Press.
62.
Graves-BrownP (ed.) (2000) Matter, Materiality and Modern Culture. London: Routledge.
63.
Graves-BrownPHarrisonRPicciniA (eds) (2013) The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of the Contemporary World. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
64.
GregoryD (1984) Space, time, and politics in social theory. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space2: 123–132.
65.
GregsonNCrangMAhamedF. (2010) Following things of rubbish value: End-of-life ships, ‘chocky-chocky’ furniture and the Bangladeshi middle class consumer. Geoforum41: 846–854.
66.
HägerstrandT (1970) What about people in regional science?Papers of the Regional Science Association24: 7–21.
67.
HägerstrandT (1973) The domain of human geography. In: ChorleyRJ (ed.) Directions in Geography. London: Methuen, 67–87.
68.
HarawayD (2003) The Companion Species Manifesto: Dogs, People, and Significant Otherness. Chicago, IL: Prickly Paradigm Press.
69.
HarmanG (2002) Tool-Being: Heidegger and the Metaphysics of Objects. Chicago, IL: Open Court.
70.
HarmanG (2005) Guerilla Metaphysics: Phenomenology and the Carpentry of Things. Chicago, IL: Open Court.
71.
HarmanG (2010) Towards Speculative Realism. Melbourne: re.press.
72.
HarveyD (1969) Explanation in Geography. London: Arnold.
73.
HarveyD (1996) Justice, Nature and the Geography of Difference. Oxford: Blackwell.
74.
HarveyDCRileyM (2005a) Landscape archaeology, heritage and the community in Devon: An oral history approach. International Journal of Heritage Studies11(4): 269–288.
75.
HarveyDCRileyM (2005b) Narrating landscape: The potential of oral history for landscape archaeology. Public Archaeology4(1): 15–26.
76.
HawkinsH (2013) Geography and art, an expanding field: Site, the body and practice. Progress in Human Geography37(1): 52–71.
77.
HeideggerM (2010 [1927]) Being and Time, translated by StambaughJ, revised by SchmidtDJ.Albany, NY: State University of New York Press.
78.
HicksD (2003) Archaeology unfolding: Diversity and the loss of isolation. Oxford Journal of Archaeology22(3): 315–329.
79.
HicksD (2005) ‘Places for thinking’ from Annapolis to Bristol: Situations and symmetries in ‘World Historical Archaeologies’. World Archaeology37(3): 73–91.
80.
HicksD (2010) The material-cultural turn: Event and effect. In: HicksDBeaudryM (eds) The Oxford Handbook of Material Culture Studies. Oxford: Oxford University Press: 25–98.
81.
HicksDBeaudryM (eds) (2010) The Oxford Handbook of Material Culture Studies. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
82.
HillJM (2007) The story of the amulet: Locating the enchantment of collections. Journal of Material Culture12(1): 65–87.
83.
HillLJ (2013a) Archaeologies and geographies of the post-industrial past: Landscape, memory and the spectral. Cultural Geographies20(3): 379–396.
84.
HillLJ (2013b) Time and the practice of charcoal burning. Cultural Geographies. doi: 10.1177/1474474013506362.
85.
HitchingsR (2003) People, plants and performance: On actor network theory and the material pleasures of the private garden. Social and Cultural Geography4(1): 99–114.
86.
HodderI (1985) Post-processual archaeology. In: SchifferM (ed.) Advances in Archaeological Method and Theory, 8. New York: Academic Press, 1–26.
87.
HodderI (ed.) (1987) Archaeology as Long-term History. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
88.
HodderI (2001) Epilogue. In: BuchliVLucasG (eds) Archaeologies of the Contemporary Past. London: Routledge, 189–191.
89.
HodderI (2011) Human-thing entanglement: Towards an integrated archaeological perspective. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute17(1): 154–177.
90.
HoltorfC (2005) From Stonehenge to Las Vegas: Archaeology as Popular Culture. Lanham, MD: AltaMira Press.
91.
HoltorfC (2007) Archaeology is a Brand! The Meaning of Archaeology in Contemporary Popular Culture. Oxford: Archaeopress.
92.
HoltorfCPicciniA (eds) (2009a) Contemporary Archaeologies: Excavating Now. Frankfurt: Peter Lang.
93.
HoltorfCPicciniA (2009b) Introduction: Fragments of a conversation about contemporary archaeologies. In: HoltorfCPicciniA (eds) Contemporary Archaeologies: Excavating Now. Frankfurt: Peter Lang, 9–29.
94.
HoltorfCWilliamsH (2006) Landscapes and memories. In: HicksDBeaudryM (eds) The Cambridge Companion to Historical Archaeology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 235–254.
95.
HoskinsWG (1955) The Making of the English Landscape. London: Hodder and Stoughton.
96.
JacksonP (2000) Rematerializing social and cultural geography. Social and Cultural Geography1(1): 9–14.
97.
JohnsonM (2007) Ideas of Landscape. Oxford: Blackwell.
98.
JohnstonR (2003) Geography: A different sort of discipline?Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers28: 133–141.
99.
JonesA (2007) Memory and Material Culture. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
100.
JonesO (2005) An ecology of emotion, memory, self and landscape. In: DavidsonJBondiLSmithM (eds) Emotional Geographies. Aldershot: Ashgate, 205–218.
101.
JonesOGarde-HansenJ (eds) (2012) Geography and Memory: Explorations in Identity, Place and Becoming. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
102.
JonkerJTillKE (2009) Mapping and excavating spectral traces in post-apartheid Cape Town. Memory Studies2(3): 303–335.
103.
JoyceRA (1996) The construction of gender in Classic Maya monuments. In: WrightRP (ed.) Gender and Archaeology. Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press, 167–195.
104.
JoyceRA (1999) Girling the girl and boying the boy: The production of adulthood in ancient Mesoamerica. World Archaeology31(3): 473–483.
105.
JoyceRA (2001a) Gender and Power in Prehispanic Mesoamerica. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press.
106.
JoyceRA (2001b) Negotiating sex and gender in classic Maya society. In: KleinC (ed.) Gender in Pre-Hispanic America. Washington, DC: Dumbarton Oaks, 109–141.
107.
JoyceRA (2002) Beauty, sexuality, body ornamentation and gender in ancient Mesoamerica. In: NelsonSRosen-AyalonM (eds) In Pursuit of Gender. Walnut Creek, CA: AltaMira, 81–92.
108.
JoyceRA (2003a) Concrete memories: Fragments of the past in the Classic Maya present (500–1000 AD). In: AlcockSvan DykeR (eds) Archaeologies of Memory. Oxford: Blackwell, 104–125.
109.
JoyceRA (2003b) Making something of herself: Embodiment in life and death at Playa de los Muertos, Honduras. Cambridge Archaeological Journal13(2): 248–261.
110.
KearnsM (2003) Geographies that matter – the rhetorical deployment of physicality?Social and Cultural Geography4(2): 139–152.
111.
KiddeyRSchofieldJ (2011) Embrace the margins: Adventures in archaeology and homelessness. Public Archaeology10(1): 4–22.
112.
KirschS (2013) Cultural geography I: Materialist turns. Progress in Human Geography37(3): 433–441.
113.
KnappB (ed.) (1992) Archaeology, Annales and Ethnohistory. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
114.
KnappettC (2005) Thinking Through Material Culture. Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press.
115.
KnappettCMalafourisL (eds) (2008) Material Agency: Towards a Non-Anthropocentric Approach. New York: Springer.
116.
KristevaJ (1997) The Portable Kristeva, edited by OliverK.New York: Columbia University Press.
117.
LathamAMcCormackD (2004) Moving cities: Rethinking the materialities of urban geographies. Progress in Human Geography28(6): 701–724.
118.
LatourB (1993) We Have Never Been Modern. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
119.
LatourB (1999) Pandora’s Hope: Essays on the Reality of Science Studies. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
120.
LatourB (2005) Reassembling the Social: An Introduction to Actor-Network-Theory. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
121.
LeesL (2002) Rematerializing geography: The ‘new’ urban geography’. Progress in Human Geography26(1): 101–112.
122.
LeoneM (1978) Time in American archaeology. In: RedmanC (ed.) Social Archaeology: Beyond Subsistence and Dating. New York: Academic Press, 25–36.
123.
LorimerH (2003) Telling small stories: Spaces of knowledge and the practice of geography. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers28(2): 197–217.
124.
LorimerH (2006) Herding memories of humans and animals. Environment and Society D: Society and Space24(4): 497–518.
125.
LucasG (2001) Critical Approaches to Fieldwork: Contemporary and Historical Archaeological Practice. London: Routledge.
126.
LucasG (2005) The Archaeology of Time. Abingdon: Routledge.
127.
LyellC (1863) The Geological Evidences of the Antiquity of Man. London: John Murray.
128.
McatackneyL (2007) The contemporary politics of landscape at the Long Kesh/Maze Prison site in Northern Ireland. In: HicksDMcatackneyLFaircloughG (eds) Envisioning Landscapes: Situations and Standpoints in Archaeology and Heritage. Walnut Creek, CA: Left Coast Press, 30–54.
129.
McCormackD (2003) An event of geographical ethics in spaces of affect. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers28(4): 488–507.
130.
McCormackD (2010) Remotely sensing affective afterlives: The spectral geographies of material remains. Annals of the Association of American Geographers100(3): 640–654.
131.
McGladeJ (1999) The times of history: Archaeology, narrative and non-linear causality. In: MurrayT (ed.) Time and Archaeology. London: Routledge, 139–163.
132.
MarshallY (2008) Archaeological possibilities for feminist theories of transition and transformation. Feminist Theory9(1): 25–45.
133.
MasseyD (1992) Politics and space/time. New Left Review196: 65–84.
134.
MasseyD (1999) Space-time, ‘science’ and the relationship between physical geography and human geography. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers24: 261–276.
135.
MasseyD (2005) For Space. London: SAGE.
136.
MassumiB (2002) Parables for the Virtual: Movement, Affect, Sensation. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
137.
MerrimanP (2012) Human geography without time-space. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers37: 13–27.
138.
MeskellLM (1999) Archaeologies of Social Life: Age, Sex, Class, Etcetera in Ancient Egypt. Oxford: Blackwell.
139.
MeskellLM (2008) Archaeologies of Materiality. Oxford: Blackwell.
140.
MillerD (2007) Stone age or plastic age?Archaeological Dialogues14(1): 23–27.
141.
MorganLH (1877) Ancient Society: Or, Researches in the Lines of Human Progress from Savagery, Through Barbarism to Civilization. London: MacMillan and Company.
142.
MoshenskaG (2008a) Ethics and ethical critique in the archaeology of modern conflict. Norwegian Archaeological Review41(2): 159–175.
143.
MoshenskaG (2008b) A hard rain: Children’s shrapnel collections in the Second World War. Journal of Material Culture13(1): 107–125.
144.
MoshenskaG (2009) Resonant materiality and violent remembering: Archaeology, memory and bombing. International Journal of Heritage Studies15(1): 44–56.
145.
MoshenskaG (2010a) Gas masks: Material culture, memory and the senses. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute16(3): 609–628.
146.
MoshenskaG (2010b) Working with memory in the archaeology of modern conflicts. Cambridge Archaeological Journal20(1): 33–48.
147.
MoshenskaG (2010c) Charred churches or iron harvests? Counter-monumentality and the commemoration of the London Blitz. Journal of Social Archaeology10(1): 5–27.
148.
NesbittCTolia-KellyDP (2009) Hadrian’s Wall: Embodied archaeologies of the linear monument. Journal of Social Archaeology9: 368–390.
149.
OlsenB (2003) Material culture after text: Re-membering things. Norwegian Archaeological Review36(2): 87–104.
150.
OlsenB (2006) Scenes from a troubled engagement: Post-structuralism and material culture studies. In: TilleyCKeaneWKüchlerS. (eds) Handbook of Material Culture. London: SAGE, 85–103.
151.
OlsenB (2007) Keeping things at arm’s length: A genealogy of asymmetry. World Archaeology39(4): 579–588.
152.
OlsenB (2010) In Defense of Things: Archaeology and the Ontology of Objects. Lanham, MD: AltaMira Press.
153.
OlsenBShanksMWebmoorT. (2012) Archaeology: The Discipline of Things. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
PenroseS (2010) Recording transition in post-industrial England: A future perfect view of Oxford’s motopolis. Archaeologies6(1): 167–180.
158.
PenroseS (2012) London 1948: The sites and after-lives of the austerity Olympics. World Archaeology44: 306–325.
159.
PetersonRRobinsonD (2012) Excavations and the afterlife of a professional football stadium, Peel Park, Accrington, Lancashire: Towards an archaeology of football. World Archaeology44: 263–279.
160.
PicciniA (2009) Guttersnipe: A micro road movie. In: HoltorfCPicciniA (eds) Contemporary Archaeologies: Excavating Now. Frankfurt: Peter Lang, 183–199.
161.
PicciniA (2012) Materialities, moving images and the Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympic Games. World Archaeology44: 291–305.
162.
Pitt RiversAHLF (1906) The Evolution of Culture and Other Essays. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
163.
PredA (1981) Social reproduction and the time-geography of everyday life. Geografiska Annaler63B: 5–22.
164.
PrigogineIStengersI (1984) Order Out of Chaos: Man’s New Dialogue With Nature. New York: Bantam.
165.
RathjeWL (1981) A manifesto for modern material culture studies. In: GouldRASchifferMB (eds) Modern Material Culture: The Archaeology of Us. New York: Academic Press, 51–56.
166.
RenfrewC (2003) Figuring It Out: What Are We? Where Do We Come From? The Parallel Visions of Artists and Archaeologists. London: Thames and Hudson.
167.
RileyMHarveyDC (2005) Landscape archaeology, heritage and the community in Devon: An oral history approach. International Journal of Heritage Studies11(4): 269–288.
168.
RoseM (2010) Envisioning the future. In: AndersonBHarrisonP (eds) Taking Place: Non-Representational Theories and Geography. Farnham: Ashgate, 341–361.
169.
SauerC (1925) The morphology of landscape. University of California Publications in Geography2: 19–53.
170.
SchofieldJHarrisonR (2010) After Modernity: Archaeological Approaches to the Contemporary Past. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
171.
SeamonD (1979) A Geography of the Lifeworld. London: Croom Helm.
172.
SerresM (1995) Genesis, translated by JamesGJamesN.Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press.
173.
SerresM with LatourB (1995) Conversations on Science, Culture, and Time. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press.
174.
ShanksM (1992) Experiencing the Past. London: Routledge.
175.
ShanksM (2007) Symmetrical archaeology. World Archaeology39(4): 589–596.
176.
ShanksM (2012) The Archaeological Imagination. Walnut Creek, CA: Left Coast Press.
177.
ShanksMTilleyC (1987) Abstract and substantial time. Archaeological Review from Cambridge6: 32–41.
178.
StengersI (2011) Thinking With Whitehead: A Free and Wild Creation of Concepts. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
179.
ThomasJ (1996) Time, Culture and Identity: An Interpretive Archaeology. London: Routledge.
180.
ThomasJ (2004) Archaeology and Modernity. London: Routledge.
181.
ThriftN (1977a) Time and theory in human geography part I. Progress in Human Geography1: 65–101.
182.
ThriftN (1977b) Time and theory in human geography part II. Progress in Human Geography1: 413–457.
183.
ThriftN (1983) On the determination of social action in space and time. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space1: 23–57.
184.
ThriftN (1996) Spatial Formations. London: SAGE.
185.
ThriftN (2002) The future of geography. Geoforum33: 291–298.
186.
TillKE (2005) The New Berlin: Memory, Politics, Place. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press.
187.
TillKE (2012) Wounded cities: Memory-work and a place-based ethics of care. Political Geography31(1): 3–14.
188.
TilleyC (1994) A Phenomenology of Landscape: Places, Paths and Monuments. Oxford: Berg.
189.
TilleyC (1999) Metaphor and Material Culture. Oxford: Blackwell.
190.
TilleyC (2004) The Materiality of Stone: Explorations in Landscape Phenomenology. Oxford: Berg.
191.
TilleyC (2007) Materiality in materials. Archaeological Dialogues14(1): 16–20.
192.
TilleyCKeaneWKüchlerS. (eds) (2006) Handbook of Material Culture. London: SAGE.
193.
Tolia-KellyDP (2004) Landscape, race and memory: Biographical mapping of the routes of British Asian landscape values. Landscape Research29(3): 277–292.
194.
Tolia-KellyDP (2011) Narrating the postcolonial landscape: Archaeologies of race at Hadrian’s Wall. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers36: 71–88.
195.
UlinJ (2009) Into the space of the past: A family archaeology. In: HoltorfCPicciniA (eds) Contemporary Archaeologies: Excavating Now. Frankfurt: Peter Lang, 145–159.
196.
Van der LeeuwSMcGladeJ (1997) Time Process and Structured Transformation in Archaeology. London: Routledge.
197.
WatsonPLe BlancSRedmanC (1971) Explanation in Archaeology. New York: Columbia University Press.
198.
WebmoorT (2007) What about ‘one more turn after the social’ in archaeological reasoning? Taking things seriously. World Archaeology39(4): 563–578.
WebmoorTWitmoreCL (2008) Things are us! A commentary on human/things relations under the banner of a ‘social’ archaeology. Norwegian Archaeology Review41(1): 53–70.
201.
WhatmoreS (1997) Dissecting the autonomous self: Hybrid cartographies for a relational ethics. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space15(1): 37–53.
202.
WhatmoreS (1999) Hybrid geographies: Rethinking the ‘human’ in human geography. In: MasseyDAllenJSarreP (eds) Human Geography Today. Cambridge: Polity Press, 24–39.
WhatmoreS (2006) Materialist returns: Practising cultural geography in and for a more-than-human world. Cultural Geographies13: 600–609.
205.
WhiteheadAN (1970 [1925]) Science and the Modern World. New York: Simon and Schuster.
206.
WhiteheadAN (1978 [1929]) Process and Reality: An Essay in Cosmology. New York: The Free Press.
207.
WhiteheadAN (2006 [1920]) The Concept of Nature: The Tarner Lectures Delivered in Trinity College November 1919. Cambridge: Press Syndicate of the University of Cambridge.
208.
WitcherRTolia-KellyDPHingleyR (2010) Archaeologies of landscape: Excavating the materialities of Hadrian’s Wall. Journal of Material Culture15: 105–128.
209.
WitmoreCL (2006) Vision, media, noise and the percolation of time: Symmetrical approaches to the mediation of the material world. Journal of Material Culture11(3): 267–292.
210.
WitmoreCL (2007) Symmetrical archaeology: Excerpts of a manifesto. World Archaeology39(4): 546–562.
211.
WylieJ (2005) A single day’s walking: Narrating self and landscape on the South West Coast Path. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers30(2): 234–247.
212.
WylieJ (2006) Depths and folds: On landscape and the gazing subject. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space24(4): 519–535.
213.
WylieJ (2007a) The spectral geographies of W.G. Sebald. Cultural Geographies14(2): 171–188.
214.
WylieJ (2007b) Landscape. Abingdon: Routledge.
215.
WylieJ (2009) Landscape, absence and the geographies of love. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers34(3): 275–289.