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Women Researching African Archaeology |
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Women Researchers:
State
Society and Historical Archaeology
Women currently working in African Archaeology. I sincerely welcome any a dditions to the list, send additions to:
Other Links:
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Although archaeology has been perceived as male dominated since its inception, throughout history women clearly enacted and emulated important roles as creators and preservers of the past. In pre-colonial Africa, whether women were mediators of trade and information (Curtin, Feierman, Thompson, and Vansina, 1991; Berger 1976) or religious and political leaders (Robins 1993), they must have been responsible for maintaining and transmitting the histories of the past. Colonial rulers, who found it difficult to understand and identify with women, outlawed the activities in which women held political and religious power (Curtin, Feierman, Thompson, and Vansina 1990:35). Subsequent to the colonization
period, westerners have served as heralds of Africa's past to the rest
of the world (Schmidt, 1995; Robertshaw, 1990a), and so there is a
marked absence of an African voice concerning the reconstruction of
Africa's past. The
first black African to publish an article on African archaeology in one
of the four major journals of African archaeology was Ekpo Eyo in the
West African Journal of Archaeology
in 1974. Until the
1990s, no female black African archaeologists I know of published in
international publications until Alinah Segoby from Botswana (1998).
In colonial Africa, race played a strong role in the segregation
of society. Until the
1950s, formal education was only minimally available to indigenous
African women; even today
fifty to seventy percent of African women are illiterate. Today
our understanding of how African women serve to transmit and maintain
their respective cultural heritages is seriously understudied. The
rearticulation of gender and social relations led not only to the
absence of an African voice, but also strayed away from emphasizing
women as conveyors of the past. Since the late 1800s, women of European descent have long played a vital role in interpreting the African past, though their contributions have long been either ignored or appropriated by their contemporaries and by present day archaeologists. Mary Barber (1872) was the first woman to write about African antiquities in South Africa, and Amelia Edwards founded the Egyptian Exploration Fund, which then produced the first scientific excavations in Africa (Fagan 1975). Maria Wilman's creation of a new "neutral" non-European based terminology for stone tool assemblages, i.e. the term Middle Stone Age, was well-received, but appropriated by more eminent male scholars. Margaret Murray was the first woman to teach archaeology at a university and to incorporate women into reconstructions of African prehistory. Joan Harding and Gertrude Caton-Thompson attributed rock art and monumental structures to the indigenous people of Africa, during a period when all achievements, including monuments and stone tools, were considered a diffusion from Europe and the Near East. Mary Leakey not only discovered the fossil remains of some significant early hominids, but was the first to reveal the presence of Early Stone Age "living floors" essentially recognizing Africans as the source for emerging human cultures, giving back to Africans the dignity, intelligence, and complexity that the West had taken away. Marie-Henrietta Alimen (1957) published the comprehensive overview of African archaeology, and she is rarely if ever noted or referenced in histographies of African archaeology A more expansive review of women who have dedicated their lives to African archaeology between the 1860s and 1960s can be found in the African Archaeological Review March 2001.
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