Present Past

Author: Hodder> Ian  

Publisher: Pen and Sword‎

Publication year: 2012

E-ISBN: 9781473800229

P-ISBN(Paperback): 9781781591727

Subject: K85 Archaeology

Keyword: 历史、地理

Language: ENG

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Description

This updated edition of Professor Ian Hodder's original and classic work on the role which anthropology must play in the interpretation of the archaeological record.There has long been a need for archaeologists and anthropologists to correlate their ideas and methods for interpreting the material culture of past civilisations. Archaeological interpretation of the past is inevitably based on the ideas and experiences of the present and the use of such ethnographic analogy has been widely adapted - and criticised, not least in Britain.In this challenging study, Ian Hodder questions the assumptions, values and methods which have been too readily accepted. At the same time, he shows how anthropology can be applied to archaeology. He examines the criteria for the proper use of analogy and, in particular, emphasises the need to consider the meaning and interpretation of material cultures within the total social and cultural contexts. He discusses anthropological models of refuse deposits, technology and production, subsistence, settlement, burial, trade exchange, art form and ritual; he then considers their application to comparable archaeological data.Throughout, Professor Hodder emphasises the need for a truly scientific approach and a critical self-awareness by archaeologists, who should be prepared to study their own social and cultural context, not least their own attitudes to the present-day material world.

Chapter

Context

Conclusion

2 Ethnoarchaeology

Relations with experimental approaches in archaeology

History of the use of ethnographic analogies in archaeology

Ethnoarchaeological field methods

3 The formation of the archaeological record

Post-deposition

Deposition

Conclusion

4 Technology and production

Formal analogies

Relational analogies based on natural processes

Cross-cultural relationships

Relational analogies and cultural context

Conclusion

5 Subsistence strategies

Hunters and gatherers

Pastoralists

Agriculturalists

Bones and seeds

Conclusion

6 Social organisation

Settlement

Burial

Exchange

Levels of societal complexity

Conclusion

7 Ritual

Conclusion

8 Art, decoration and style

Art

Decoration

Style

Conclusion

9 Looking at ourselves

10 Conclusion: archaeological anthropology

Interpreting the past

A theory of material culture

Bibliography

Index

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