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The Archaeology of Events: Cultural Change and Continuity in the Pre-Columbian Southeast

Editat de Zackary I. Gilmore, Jason M. O'Donoughue
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 31 mar 2015
The first work to apply an events-based approach to the analysis of pivotal developments in the pre-Columbian Southeast

Across the social sciences, gradualist evolutionary models of historical dynamics are giving way to explanations focused on the punctuated and contingent “events” through which history is actually experienced. The Archaeology of Events is the first book-length work that systematically applies this new eventful approach to major developments in the pre-Columbian Southeast.
Traditional accounts of pre-Columbian societies often portray them as “cold” and unchanging for centuries or millennia. Events-based analyses have opened up archaeological discourse to the more nuanced and flexible idea of context-specific, rapidly transpiring, and broadly consequential historical “events” as catalysts of cultural change.

The Archaeology of Events, edited by Zackary I. Gilmore and Jason M. O’Donoughue, considers a variety of perspectives on the nature and scale of events and their role in historical change. These perspectives are applied to a broad range of archeological contexts stretching across the Southeast and spanning more than 7,000 years of the region’s pre-Columbian history. New data suggest that several of this region’s most pivotal historical developments, such as the founding of Cahokia, the transformation of Moundville from urban center to vacated necropolis, and the construction of Poverty Point’s Mound A, were not protracted incremental processes, but rather watershed moments that significantly altered the long-term trajectories of indigenous Southeastern societies.

In addition to exceptional occurrences that impacted entire communities or peoples, southeastern archaeologists are increasingly recognizing the historical importance of localized, everyday events, such as building a house, crafting a pot, or depositing shell. The essays collected by Gilmore and O’Donoughue show that small-scale events can make significant contributions to the unfolding of broad, regional-scale historical processes and to the reproduction or transformation of social structures.

The Archaeology of Events is the first volume to explore the archaeological record of events in the Southeastern United States, the methodologies that archaeologists bring to bear on this kind of research, and considerations of the event as an important theoretical concept.
 
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780817318505
ISBN-10: 081731850X
Pagini: 328
Ilustrații: 43 illustrations
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.65 kg
Ediția:First Edition, First Edition
Editura: University Of Alabama Press
Colecția University Alabama Press

Notă biografică

Zackary I. Gilmore is a PhD candidate in anthropology at the University of Florida studying the types and scales of social interaction engaged in by Archaic period hunter-gatherers in the southeastern United States. His current focus is on the spread of early pottery technology and the development of large-scale gathering places in northeast Florida during the Late Archaic period.

Jason M. O’Donoughue is a PhD candidate in anthropology at the University of Florida. His recent research focuses on constructing landscape histories of Florida’s freshwater springs and exploring both ancient and contemporary engagements with these places.
 

Recenzii

“This is a very timely and provocative work. The event approach sustained across all the chapters should be of interest to any archaeologist with an historical bent.”
—Douglas K. Charles, coeditor of Recreating Hopewell and Theory, Method, and Practice in Modern Archaeology

“This wonderful collection will help to entrench the American Southeast as an emerging locus of theoretical innovation in archaeology.”
—Victor D. Thompson, coeditor of The Archaeology and Historical Ecology of Small Scale Economies

Descriere

The first work to apply an events-based approach to the analysis of pivotal developments in the pre-Columbian Southeast