Indira Montt , Daniela Valenzuela , Barbara Cases , Calogero M. Santoro , José M. Capriles , Vivien G. Standen
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引用次数: 1
Abstract
Textilization processes envisioned as technological transformation of animal fibres and the incorporation of textiles into human bodies, is analyzed among Chinchorro hunter gatherers, along the hyperarid Pacific coast of the Atacama Desert throughout the Holocene (ca. 7800–3500 cal BP). The Chinchorro, as producers and consumers of South American camelid fibres and textiles, created a range of textilized mortuary corporealities. We studied bodies (Artificially Treated Bodies, Statuettes, Figurines), tools and textiles. Based on technological analysis of textiles dressing the bodies, we address the technological procedures employed in textile production. We defined: (a) textilization of Chinchorro bodies, (b) the entailed social relations and technological practices and, and (c) the temporal variability of camelid fibre textile production. These results are discussed within the broader context of early Andean textile fibre management and camelid domestication. From a worldwide perspective, we highlighted how Chinchorro textilization processes, as a microhistory, can be seen in the flow of human-nonhuman animal mutual interactions that gave rise to domestication and the later textile industry. We conclude that progressively ties between people and camelids intensified, by increasing the incorporation of fibres and textiles in the bodies, and the development of communities of practice which shared a concern for textile embodiment.
在整个全新世(约7800–3500 cal BP),在阿塔卡马沙漠极度干旱的太平洋沿岸,Chinchoro狩猎采集者对动物纤维的技术改造和纺织品融入人体的Textilization过程进行了分析。作为南美骆驼纤维和纺织品的生产商和消费者,Chinchoro创造了一系列文本化的太平间实体。我们研究了身体(人工处理的身体、雕像、雕像)、工具和纺织品。在对纺织品对身体的工艺分析的基础上,我们介绍了纺织品生产中使用的工艺程序。我们定义了:(a)Chinchoro身体的文本化,(b)所涉及的社会关系和技术实践,以及(c)骆驼纤维纺织品生产的时间可变性。这些结果是在早期安第斯纺织纤维管理和骆驼驯化的更广泛背景下讨论的。从世界范围的角度来看,我们强调了Chinchoro文本化过程作为一个微观历史,可以在人类与非人类动物相互作用的过程中看到,这种相互作用导致了驯化和后来的纺织业。我们得出的结论是,通过增加纤维和纺织品在身体中的结合,以及共同关注纺织品体现的实践社区的发展,人与骆驼之间的联系逐渐加强。
期刊介绍:
An innovative, international publication, the Journal of Anthropological Archaeology is devoted to the development of theory and, in a broad sense, methodology for the systematic and rigorous understanding of the organization, operation, and evolution of human societies. The discipline served by the journal is characterized by its goals and approach, not by geographical or temporal bounds. The data utilized or treated range from the earliest archaeological evidence for the emergence of human culture to historically documented societies and the contemporary observations of the ethnographer, ethnoarchaeologist, sociologist, or geographer. These subjects appear in the journal as examples of cultural organization, operation, and evolution, not as specific historical phenomena.