Between Artifacts and Texts: Historical Archaeology in Global Perspective

Front Cover
Springer Science & Business Media, Jan 31, 1998 - Social Science - 215 pages
This book is about historical archaeologies all over the world; about their history, their methods, and their raison d'etre. The focus is on an existential question for archaeology: whether investigations of mate rial culture are necessary at all when studying societies with writing. Is it not sufficient to read and interpret texts if we wish to understand and explain historical periods? This book has been written out of a conviction that archaeology is important, even in the study of literate societies. Yet the book has also been written out of a conviction that the importance of the historical archaeologies is not obvious to everyone. The disciplines have a tendency to be marginalized in relation both to history and to archaeology and anthropology, because the archaeologi cal results are sometimes perceived as unnecessary confirmations of what is already known. Although I regard theoretical considerations as crucial for all scholarly work, I do not think that the solution to this marginalization can be found in any "definitive" theory that might raise the disciplines above the threatened tautology. Instead, I have found it more important to examine different methodological approaches in the historical archaeologies, to investigate how material culture and writ ing can and could be integrated. I am convinced that the tautological threat should be averted in the actual encounter of artifact and text. By problematizing this encounter, I believe that it is possible to create favorable methodological conditions for new perspectives on the past.
 

Contents

The Paradox of the Historical Archaeologies
iii
Historical Archaeologies in Europe
xi
Historical Archaeologies in the Middle East and Asia
27
Historical Archaeologies in Africa and America
61
The Field of Historical Archaeology
93
The Dialogue of Historical Archaeology
133
Conclusion Historical Archaeology as a Methodological Perspective
167
References
173
Index
197
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