d'Alpoim Guedes Jade, Gonzalez Sara, Rivera-Collazo Isabel
Department of Anthropology, Scripps Institution of Oceanography University of California San Diego USA.
Department of Anthropology University of Washington Seattle USA.
Am Anthropol. 2021 Dec;123(4):898-915. doi: 10.1111/aman.13669. Epub 2021 Nov 11.
The COVID-19 pandemic offered humanity a portal through which we could break with the past and imagine our world anew. This article reviews how over the course of 2020, a series of intersecting crises at the nexus of racism, settler colonialism, climate change, and sexual harassment have prompted acts of resistance and care in the field of archaeology. Throughout the article, we provide concrete suggestions as to how we can continue the work of movements begun over the course of the past year to improve dynamics within our field and use the lessons from our field to improve life for all people in the world and for our planet. [].
新冠疫情为人类提供了一个契机,借此我们可以与过去决裂,重新构想我们的世界。本文回顾了在2020年期间,种族主义、殖民定居、气候变化和性骚扰等一系列相互交织的危机如何在考古学领域引发了抵抗和关怀行动。在整篇文章中,我们就如何延续过去一年中发起的运动的工作提出了具体建议,以改善我们领域内的动态,并利用我们领域的经验教训来改善世界上所有人以及我们星球的生活。