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Interviews

Surroundings, Beginnings and Formation of a Journal – A Dialogue with NAR's Alpha Editor Bjørn Myhre

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Pages 14-25 | Published online: 20 Aug 2008
 

Abstract

Bjørn Myhre played a key role in the establishment of Norwegian Archaeological Review. All in all, 17 volumes of NAR were produced under his editorial leadership (1968–1978 and 1985–1990). Bjørn Myhre was born in Stavanger in 1938. He did his degree at the University of Bergen (1964), and has since been engaged in research, editing, culture heritage management, excavations, teaching and administration – in Stavanger, Bergen and Oslo. He has produced important prehistoric overviews, cf. Magnus & Myhre 1976, Myhre 2002a, 2003, and 2004. The Iron Age society in south‐west Norway has been central in his research. Of several important excavations, the Iron Age farm site Ullandhaug (1967–68) is fundamental. He has explored different aspects of Iron Age farms – agrarian development, settlement history, house construction and structure (e.g. Myhre 1973, 1978). His studies include discussions on social and political development (Myhre 1985a, 1987, 1998, 2002b). Methodology and theory became a focal point during his time as professor at the University of Oslo from 1985, e.g. ‘Trends in Norwegian archaeology’ (1985b) and ‘Theory in Scandinavian archaeology since 1960 (1991). In 1993, he was appointed as Director of Museum of Archaeology in Stavanger. In 2008 he formally retired, but is still a very active debating and writing archaeologist.

 Initially, Bjørn Myhre was invited to write an article about the establishment and first developments of NAR. Subsequently, this was changed to a dialogue text based on questions and answers communicated by email during the autumn of 2007. The basis for questions and replies is a selection of diagrams prepared for the Editorial in this issue which display trends covered in the 40 volumes of NAR.

Notes

1. The five regional archaeological museums in Norway were Universitetets Oldsaksamling, University of Oslo (now Museum of Cultural History); Stavanger Museum (now Archaeological Museum of Stavanger), Historisk Museum, University of Bergen (now part of Bergen Museum); Det Kgl. Norske Videnskabers Selskap, Museet (Trondheim, now NTNU Vitenskapsmuseet); and Tromsø Museum (now University of Tromsø, Tromsø Museum – Universitetsmuseet).

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