Wiley-Blackwell, 2008. — 336 p.
Creating Prehistory deals even–handedly and sympathetically with the creation of several different sorts of prehistory during the volatile period between the two World Wars.
- Investigates the origins of professional archaeology in Britain during the inter–war period
- Brings to life many fascinating and controversial personalities and their creeds, including the archaeologists O. G. S. Crawford, Mortimer Wheeler and Gordon Childe; Grafton Elliot Smith and W. H. R. Rivers (of ‘Regeneration’ fame); Alfred Watkins and The Old Straight Track; and the thunderous George Watson Macgregor Reid, who brought the Druids back to Stonehenge
- Examines the production of archaeological knowledge as a social process, and the relationship between personalities, institutions, ideology, and power
- Addresses the ongoing debates of the significance of sites such as Stonehenge, Avebury, and Maiden Castle
Adam Stout is a Research Fellow in Archaeology at the University of Wales, Lampeter. His pioneering study of urban cowkeeping in 1978 marked him out as a historian of the unusual. Other works include
The Thorn and the Waters: Miraculous Glastonbury in the Eighteenth Century (2007);
What’s Real and What Is Not: Reflections upon Archaeology and Earth Mysteries in Britain (2006);
Pimlico: Deep Well of Glee (1997);
The Old Gloucester: Study of a Cattle Breed (1980); and a series of acclaimed artistic collaborations including
Where Two Rivers Meet: The Story of Kennet Mouth (1994).