Random fiction question: non-magical archaeology

Aug 03, 2015 10:37


A question occurred to me last night. Perhaps the two best known fictional archaeologists (taking the term somewhat loosely), across fiction in all media, are Indiana Jones and Lara Croft. Both of them have in common that they investigate things about which there were rumours of ancient magical powers, or gods, or other such supernatural and ( Read more... )

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atreic August 3 2015, 11:06:52 UTC
What about the Doomsday Book, by Connie Willis? It won a hugo, so it's pretty famous, and the protagonists are on the border between historians and archeologists - I think described as historians, but definitely excavating graves and old buildings etc. It's timetravel, so maybe that breaks your No Magic criteria, but it's not Magic in that the stuff they find out is Definitely Just As History Was, it's just Magic in the way they find it out...

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cartesiandaemon August 3 2015, 11:35:58 UTC
Oh, good example. Come to think of it there must be other time-travel stories which fulfil the spirit of "finding out about the past" even if there's 'magic' involved. Asimov's Ugly Little Boy. And surely I can think of others though I can't right now.

ETA: And I guess there's the reverse, like Da Vinci Code, where what's uncovered may or may not be magic, but is a matter of "ancient secrets which we need to re-learn"...

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ewx August 4 2015, 09:17:26 UTC
Cowl (Neal Asher) arguably includes some very-distant-past paleontology by means of time travel, although that's incidental to the plot really.

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simont August 3 2015, 11:52:40 UTC
I haven't read it - perhaps another one to go on my list!

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atreic August 3 2015, 11:53:58 UTC
I read it as part of my 'read books by people I will hear at Worldcon' project, and I enjoyed it, but it didn't rock my socks.

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