理解考古告诉:通过物质附着传播记忆与接触祖先

IF 1.6 2区 历史学 0 ARCHAEOLOGY
Stephen A. Dueppen, Daphne E. Gallagher
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引用次数: 0

摘要

Tell遗址是世界许多地区考古解释的中心,因为它们有着漫长的分层沉积序列。然而,人们对创造建筑遗迹和相关材料的文化选择知之甚少,对前几层将居住社区置于上方的方式也知之甚少。本文呼吁通过对西非布基纳法索考古遗址的考察,对tell的形成过程进行能动的理解。我们认为,告诉在这里形成了强大的文化信仰,即生活和祖先社区之间的共同居住。根据挖掘数据和道路建设暴露的横截面图,我们提供了证据,证明建筑遗迹是在与祖先的创造和崇拜有关的仪式中积极创造和保存的。告诉的特定地方只有在个人的活跃记忆从生活社区中消失后,才被用于新的建筑(通常有奠基仪式沉积物),导致缓慢(至少80-100年)的分层过程。1500多年来,通过这些核心仪式过程的变化,充满活力的跨时代社会群体在不平等、平等革命和黑死病大流行的时代重塑了自己。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Understanding Archaeological Tells: Circulating Memories and Engaging with Ancestors through Material Attachments
Tell sites are central to archaeological interpretation in many world regions due to their lengthy sequences of stratified deposits. However, the cultural choices that create architectural remnants and associated materials are more poorly understood, as are the ways that previous layers situate the living community above. This article calls for agentive understandings of tell-formation processes through examination of archaeological sites in Burkina Faso, West Africa. We argue that tells here formed through strong cultural beliefs of co-residence between the living and ancestral communities. Drawing on data from excavation and cross-section profiles exposed by road construction, we provide evidence that architectural remnants were actively created and preserved in rituals related to the making and veneration of ancestors. Particular places in tells were used for new construction (often with foundation ritual deposits) only after the active memory of the individual faded from the living community, resulting in a slow (at least 80–100 years) stratification process. Through variations on these core ritual processes, dynamic multi-temporal social groups reinvented themselves over 1500 years through eras of inequity, egalitarian revolution and the Black Death pandemic.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
8.30%
发文量
38
期刊介绍: The Cambridge Archaeological Journal is the leading journal for cognitive and symbolic archaeology. It provides a forum for innovative, descriptive and theoretical archaeological research, paying particular attention to the role and development of human intellectual abilities and symbolic beliefs and practices. Specific topics covered in recent issues include: the use of cultural neurophenomenology for the understanding of Maya religious belief, agency and the individual, new approaches to rock art and shamanism, the significance of prehistoric monuments, ritual behaviour on Pacific Islands, and body metamorphosis in prehistoric boulder artworks. In addition to major articles and shorter notes, the Cambridge Archaeological Journal includes review features on significant recent books.
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