2018_EJRNL_PP_MELISSA_S__ROSENZWEIG_1.pdf
Terbatas Lili Sawaludin Mulyadi
» ITB
Terbatas Lili Sawaludin Mulyadi
» ITB
This paper promotes an explicit study of archaeologies of empire and environment, and advances theories and
methods in environmental archaeology that demonstrate that environmental practices articulate people's relationships to imperial authority. While many studies of empire take for granted that centralized organization
and surplus production lead to political control and social inequity, in the papers assembled for this special issue,
the very relationship between human-environment interactions and political power becomes the object of study.
In this introduction, we review established archaeological approaches to empire, explain how environmental
frameworks productively recast our understandings of imperialism, and proffer a number of avenues for continued research on the subject, including those provided by the articles in this issue. We present three overarching themes for the study of empire and environment—scale, legacy, and resilience and resistance—and
discuss their implementation with the papers that follow. Ultimately, we argue that imperialism entails the
management of heterogeneous peoples and environments, and therefore, archaeologies of empire require the
integrated study of humans, landscapes, and biota.
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