|
 |
Philosophical
Statement The Society for Garden
Archaeology fosters and promotes international scholarly communication regarding
methods, techniques, and theories related to the archaeology of gardens.
Gardens are bounded spaces purposefully created for human interaction, and
while they may contain a diversity of plants and other features, they are
also staging grounds for a myriad of social and civic interactions within
a given society. While the conceptual categories of different peoples may
or may not include “garden,” such places are often identified and investigated
by researchers as spaces, remains, and refuse distinct from, and yet integral
to other archaeological features.
|
| The Society recognizes
that gardens may be created independently or included in a range of contexts,
from simple domestic structures to elaborate public domains; as parts of
small households, estates, or palaces; that they may be created not only
for production, study, or leisure, but also for myth-making and diffusion
of political ideologies. Thus, they may be investigated from the perspectives
of Landscape Archaeology, Household Archaeology, or other sub-disciplines.
It is these issues and others that encourage the creation of a |

Garden remains at Block 6, East Second
Ward
on Third Street, Nara Capital Site
--------
© National Research Institute for Cultural Properties, Nara |
| |
society in which
they may be discussed. The members of the Society believe that conduct-
ing
archaeological research successfully in and about gardens requires special
approaches, from excavation techniques to laboratory analyses to theories
used to interpret the results of field research. It is a domain of investigation
with unique challenges and potentials.
Gardens occupy the twilight realm between architecture and landscape, and
are manifest as repositories of cultural meaning across the broad spectrum
of social, civil, and eco-
logical exchange. These are domains in which archaeologists
often situate themselves. There is a shortage of accumulated and shared
information that would be helpful in broadening and deepening the study
of places where human activities and natural processes interact, resulting
in culturally produced biotopes with specific cultural values.
Currently, many archaeologists engage in garden archaeology without clear
understand-
ings of the range of methods and interpretive vehicles that may
be employed in such undertakings, while others, though few in number, identify
themselves as Garden Archaeologists. Many archaeologists who do not consider
themselves Garden Archaeologists nevertheless will excavate gardens and
therefore desire information on approaches that they might take in such
work. The Society of Garden Archaeology intends to promote better knowledge
of such opportunities and, thus, advance scholarship in the general field
of Archaeology. |