In this concise, friendly textbook, Patricia Urban and Edward Schortman teach the basics of archaeological theory, making explicit the crucial link between theory and the actual conduct of archaeological research. The first half of the text addresses the general nature of theory, as well as how it i
Archaeological Theory in Practice
β Scribed by Patricia A Urban, Edward Schortman
- Publisher
- Routledge
- Year
- 2019
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 385
- Edition
- 2
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Many students view archaeological theory as a subject distinct from field research. This division is reinforced by the way theory is taught, often in stand-alone courses that focus more on logic and reasoning than on the application of ideas to fieldwork. Divorcing thought from action does not convey how archaeologists go about understanding the past.
This book bridges the gap between theory and practice by looking in detail at how the authors and their colleagues used theory to interpret what they found while conducting research in northwest Honduras. This is not a linear narrative. Rather, the book highlights the open-ended nature of archaeological investigations in which theories guide research whose findings may challenge these initial interpretations and lead in unexpected directions. Pursuing those novel investigations requires new theories that are themselves subject to refutation by newly gathered data. The central case study is the writersβ work in Honduras. The interrelations of fieldwork, data, theory, and interpretation are also illustrated with two long-running archaeological debates, the emergence of inequality in southern Mesopotamia and inferring the ancient meanings of Stonehenge.
The book is of special interest to undergraduate Anthropology/Archaeology majors and first- and second-year graduate students, along with anyone interested in how archaeologists convert the static materials we find into dynamic histories of long-vanished people.
β¦ Table of Contents
Cover
Half Title
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Contents
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
1 Explanation, Theory, and the Social Sciences
Explanation
Common Sense and Worldviews
Good Sense and Theories
Theories in the Social Sciences
Summary
General Review
2 The Naco Valley and Us
A Bit of Reflexivity
The Naco Valleyβs Setting
Outline of Naco Valley and Mesoamerican Prehistory as Understood in 2018
Research and Theory in the Naco Valley
3 Culture History
Scrambling to Fill the Chasm of Prehistory
Archaeology and Culture History
Summary of Culture Historical Premises
Culture History and the Naco Valley
Interpretations
The Naco Valley, AD 825βAs We Saw it in the Early 1980s
4 Processualism
Processualism and Modernism
Methods Developed by Processualists
Summary of Processualist Principles
Naco Valley Research and the Processual Paradigm
Processualist Influences: 1975β1979
Kirk Andersonβs Geomorphological Study
John Douglassβs Hinterland Households
Looking Ahead
The Naco Valley in AD 825 as Seen Through a Processualist Lens
5 Marxism I: Trade and Power
Marxian Premises
Marxian Methods
Returning to the Naco Valley in 1988: World Systems Theory
Setting to Work in 1988: Tying Up Loose Ends, Getting Entangled in New Threads
6 Marxism II: Prestige Goods Theory
Prestige Goods Theory
How PGT Related to What We Knew in 1988
Grappling with Crafts
Evaluating the Hypothesis, 1990β1991
Where We Stood in 1991
The Naco Valley, AD 825βas of the Early 1990s
7 Practicing Power Over Time
Hypothesis Testing Continues
Crafting in the Hinterland
Change Over Time and a Return to Chronology
Changing Power Relations in the Naco Valley and Beyond
Practice Theory
The Naco Valley, AD 825βAs Seen from 2018
8 Identity
Humanism
Posthumanism, Transhumanism, and Antihumanism
Processualism and Postprocessualism
Identity: Feminism and Ethnicity
Sex, Gender, and Archaeological Interpretation
Queer Theory
Groups and Identity
An Archaeological Example
Naco and Difference
9 Looking at Meaning: Semiotics
Symbols
Saussure and Structuralism
Peircean Semiotics
An Archaeological Example
Naco and Semiotics
10 Phenomenology and Experience
Edmund Husserl
Martin Heidegger
Maurice Merleau-Ponty
An Archaeological Example
The Naco Valley
11 New Materiality
Philosophy and New Materiality
The Word βMaterialβ
New Materiality Itself
An Archaeological Example
Naco Valley
12 Taking on the State in Southern Mesopotamia
Southern Mesopotamia
Objects of Biblical Significance
Culture History and the Sumerians
Processualism and the Rise of the State
Cities, Storage, and Power
Processualism and the Expansion of Research Designs
Processualism and the State
Marxism and the State of Power
Seizing Power and Wealth with Class
Expanding the Analytical Scope: States, Colonies, and Inter-Regional Exploitation
Interpretivism: Fragmenting the State
Power and Gender
Communication Across Theoretical Schools
13 Multiple Views of Stonehenge
Stonehenge Today
Antiquaries and Stonehenge
Addressing History in Context
Why was Stonehenge Built?
Creating Culture through Experiences of the Material
Continuing Contests for Stonehenge
Stonehenge and Identity
14 Conclusions
What Have We Learned about Naco Valley Prehistory?
What Does this Tell Us About the Nature of Archaeological Research?
A Few Final Words
Suggested Readings
Glossary
Index
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