Ponentes

Alfredo González-Ruibal

Científico Titular en el Instituto de Ciencias del Patrimonio (INCIPIT) del CSIC

Alfredo González Ruibal es doctor en Arqueología Prehistórica por la Universidad Complutense de Madrid. Desarrolla su labor en el Instituto de Ciencias de Patrimonio (INCIPIT).

Entre 2009 y 2012 dirigió un proyecto sobre arqueología de la guerra civil española y el franquismo. Además, ha estudiado el periodo fascista en Etiopía y el colonialismo en Guinea Ecuatorial a través de sus restos materiales.

Ha publicado en algunas de las más importantes revistas internacionales de arqueología como son Current Anthropology, World Archaeology, o Antiquity. También es el editor del primer volumen sobre arqueología de la guerra civil española en la revista Complutum.

Entre sus libros destacan Volver a las Trincheras. Una arqueología de la guerra civil (Alianza, 2016) y Tierra Arrasada. Un viaje por la violencia del Paleolítico al siglo XXI (Crítica, 2023)

Academia.edu

Gabriel Moshenka

Associate Professor (University College London)

Gabe Moshenska is Associate Professor in Public Archaeology. His research interests range wildly from gas masks and ghost stories to internet memes and the contested reception of Milton’s theological writings in the nineteenth century. His fieldwork is focused on collaborative archaeology and heritage projects in Spain, Finland, Kenya, and the UK. Gabe is the author of more than one hundred publications across several disciplines. His books include Life-Writing in the History of Archaeology: Critical Perspectives (2023, co-edited with Clare Lewis), Material Cultures of Childhood in Second World War Britain (2019), Key Concepts in Public Archaeology (edited, 2017), and Ethics and the Archaeology of Violence (2015, co-edited with Alfredo González-Ruibal). He is the Editor-in-Chief of Public Archaeology.

Academia.edu

Barbara Hausmair

Assistant Professor (University of Innsbruck)

Barbara Hausmair is Professor of Historical Archaeology at the University of Innsbruck, Austria. Her research focuses on identity formation in times of crises, mortuary practices, and the archaeology of 20th-century conflict in central Europe with particular regard to the materiality of Nazi terror and related memory discourses.

Academia.edu