2005
DOI: 10.2190/dtuf-2gpn-em0q-xpam
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Straw Men and Hyperbole: A Response to “Ethics and Hyperreality of the Archaeological Thought World”

Abstract: It was with great curiosity, and ultimately great disappointment, that I read the latest essay from Dr. Jay Custer (2005). His article stands as a very interesting study of a personal journey. For 28 of his 33 years of experience, Custer chose to ignore surviving Indian groups in Delaware and to downplay the relationship of extant Indians and people of the pre-Contact periods. After being called on his failings, Custer transformed into (from his perspective) one of the only archaeologists to work properly with… Show more

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“…Central to his message are three priorities: fostering dialogue between archaeologists and Indians, allowing native priorities to shape research agendas, and incorporating a stronger preservation ethic to protect unthreatened sites. A flurry of responses to Custer's programmatic statement published in the same issue of North American Archaeologist documented a range of reactions by archaeologists (e.g., Espenshade 2005;Moeller 2005). Some questioned Custer's choice of (possibly rhetorical) language to characterize archaeologists' failures, and others noted his tendency to write of American Indians and of archaeologists in rather monolithic terms.…”
Section: Descendant Communities and Indigenous Archaeologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Central to his message are three priorities: fostering dialogue between archaeologists and Indians, allowing native priorities to shape research agendas, and incorporating a stronger preservation ethic to protect unthreatened sites. A flurry of responses to Custer's programmatic statement published in the same issue of North American Archaeologist documented a range of reactions by archaeologists (e.g., Espenshade 2005;Moeller 2005). Some questioned Custer's choice of (possibly rhetorical) language to characterize archaeologists' failures, and others noted his tendency to write of American Indians and of archaeologists in rather monolithic terms.…”
Section: Descendant Communities and Indigenous Archaeologymentioning
confidence: 99%