Article

These Words Are My Own: Archaeological Theory in Dialect

Details

Citation

López Aceves JM, Molloy BMI, Graham J, Eriksen MH, Mol E, Pétursdóttir Þ, Sequeira J, Casimiro T, Accinelli Obando A & Johnson M (2026) These Words Are My Own: Archaeological Theory in Dialect. Cambridge Archaeological Journal. https://doi.org/10.1017/s0959774325100243

Abstract
English is the lingua franca not only for academia but also for almost all international infrastructures and global communications. It comes as no surprise, then, that the dominant and assumed normative voice in archaeology is standard British English (SBE) for narratives of various times and places. This language is ‘majoritarian’—by this we do not mean that it is spoken by most of humanity, but that it is the imposed ‘ideal’ others are measured against, and that is an issue. Categories, terms and ways of interpretation are all done from a privileged majoritarian position. These do not translate and are certainly not applicable in all the different places where archaeology takes place. This paper is the culmination of conversations that occurred during a Theoretical Archaeology Group conference session in 2023, with contributing authors having adapted their talks into a discussion format to keep the conversation on challenging language representation active within the discipline.

Journal
Cambridge Archaeological Journal

StatusEarly Online
FundersUniversity of Stirling
Publication date online31/01/2026
Date accepted by journal03/11/2025
PublisherCambridge University Press (CUP)
ISSN0959-7743
eISSN1474-0540

People (1)

Dr Tânia Casimiro

Dr Tânia Casimiro

Research Fellow (CSPM), Philosophy

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