Beyond Individual Lives: Using Comparative Osteobiography to Trace Social Patterns in Classical Italy.

John Robba
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

Osteobiographical studies have usually focused upon investigating an individual's life experience. However, we can also understand variation in the shape of the life course itself as an object of study: Are there common patterns for how lives unfold within a society? Are there events or experiences that channel life courses? This approach to the life course can be adopted for ancient as well as for modern lives. A key element here is developing new methodologies for characterizing and comparing how lives develop through time, for instance, by ordering biological data in sequence, looking for time-structured patterns in them both by eye and through multivariate statistics. This article presents an initial exploration of this problem, using skeletal and archaeological data on 47 adults from the fifth to third centuries B.C. at Pontecagnano, an urban site in Campania, Italy. The results show both the importance of gender in the life course and the effects of different kinds of physical stress, probably due to specialization in labor. The result is not discrete categories of people but fuzzy envelopes of life possibilities.

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超越个人生活:用比较骨传学追踪古典意大利的社会模式。
骨传记研究通常侧重于调查个人的生活经历。然而,我们也可以把生命历程本身形态的变化作为研究对象来理解:在一个社会中,生命如何展开是否存在共同的模式?是否有一些事件或经历引导了生命的进程?这种生命历程的方法既适用于古代生活,也适用于现代生活。这里的一个关键因素是开发新的方法来描述和比较生命是如何随着时间的推移而发展的,例如,通过按顺序排列生物数据,通过眼睛和多元统计来寻找它们的时间结构模式。这篇文章对这个问题进行了初步的探索,使用了意大利坎帕尼亚的一个城市遗址,Pontecagnano,从公元前5世纪到公元前3世纪的47名成年人的骨骼和考古数据。结果表明,性别在生命历程中的重要性和不同类型的体力压力的影响,可能是由于劳动的专业化。结果不是人们的离散分类,而是生活可能性的模糊信封。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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