Avikunthak, Ashish

Bureaucratic archaeology: state, science and past in postcolonial India - UK: Cambridge University Press, 2021. - xxxiv, 328p. hb.; 24cm. - South Asia in the Social Sciences .

Includes references and index

Bureaucratic Archaeology is a multi-faceted ethnography of quotidian practices of archaeology, bureaucracy and science in postcolonial India, concentrating on the workings of Archaeological Survey of India (ASI). This book uncovers an endemic link between micro-practice of archaeology in the trenches of the ASI to the manufacture of archaeological knowledge, wielded in the making of political and religious identity and summoned as indelible evidence in the juridical adjudication in the highest courts of India. This book is a rare ethnography of the daily practice of a postcolonial bureaucracy from within rather than from the outside. It meticulously uncovers the social, cultural, political and epistemological ecology of ASI archaeologists to show how postcolonial state assemblies and produces knowledge. This is the first book-length monograph on the workings of archaeology in a non-western world, which meticulously shows how the theory of archaeological practice deviates, transforms, and generates knowledge outside the Euro-American epistemological tradition.

9781316512395


Sacred space
India
Archaeological Survey of India
Antiquities
Archaeology--Political aspects
Excavations--Archaeology

934.01 / AVI