The Archaeology of Race looks at how racial and social theory was practically applied by British historians and archaeologists to interpret the past during the late nineteenth century, particularly through the use of material culture from ancient Egypt and Greece. It specifically focuses on the ideas of Francis Galton and the role of the Egyptologist
Flinders Petrie in applying these (and sometimes disagreeing with them) in his work in Egypt, drawing specifically on archives and objects from the Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology and the Galton collection at UCL. As well as detailing the working relationship between Galton and Petrie and placing their ideas in historical context.