Fleur Kemmers, "Rethinking numismatics: the archaeology of coins"
AbstractIn order to have a constructive dialogue, you'd have to have some numismatists capable of it. It seems that such an idea would be an anathema to the majority of the self-centred no-questions-asking kitchen-tabletop-numismatists gathered around organizations such as the ACCG.
This paper sets out to re-member coins into archaeological discourse. It is argued that coins, as part of material culture, need to be examined within the theoretical framework of historical archaeology and material-culture studies. Through several case studies we demonstrate how coins, through their integration of text, image and existence as material objects, offer profound insights not only into matters of economy and the ‘big history’ of issuers and state organization but also into ‘small histories’, cultural values and the agency of humans and objects. In the formative period of archaeology in the 19th century the study of coins played an important role in the development of new methods and concepts. Today, numismatics is viewed as a field apart. The mutual benefits of our approach to the fields of archaeology and numismatics highlight the need for a new and constructive dialogue between the disciplines.
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