{"title":"从巨石阵到迈锡尼。考古解释的挑战","authors":"Svein Vatsvåg Nielsen","doi":"10.1080/00293652.2022.2157745","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"It is not often I come across books that are concerned with two supposedly unrelated prehistoric phenomena, but which still succeeds in capturing my full scholarly attention. From Stonehenge to Mycenae. The Challenges of Archaeological Interpretation by John C. Barrett and Michael J. Boyd is another one of these rare books. It is even a rather tiny piece, with a total of 169 pages of text and 45 illustrations, focused thematically on the knowledge production of European prehistory and the challenges of archaeological interpretation. More specifically, the book addresses ‘the archaeology of two regions that were once linked by the diffusionist narratives that Colin Renfrew recognized as no longer being viable’ and the two regions are, as indicated by the title, the area surrounding Stonehenge and Aegean during the second and third millenniums BCE. The main challenge of archaeological interpretation that From Stonehenge to Mycenae focuses on is the one emerging from the relation between two types of archaeological evidence. On the one hand, there is that evidence which pertains to mobility in the past, or what was previously referred to as ‘diffusion’ in archaeology, and on the other hand there is that which pertains to regional continuity in cultural traditions. This general theme is also probably what makes the book itself so alluring, no matter what background the reader has, and the authors do a good job in situating their work within the now well-known research history of processual and postprocessual archaeology. From their view, which it should be mentioned is firmly UK-based (Sheffield and Cambridge), the first important contribution to our knowledge of European prehistory during this period was made by V. G Childe in the late 1950s, when he connected the archaeology of different regions of Europe and Western Asia through diffusionist and rather schematic models. This was the state of the art in European prehistory before the advent of radiocarbon dating, which we know had a tremendous impact on chronologies. The second contribution, in these author’s view, was made by Colin Renfrew in the 1970s, when he used results from radiocarbon dating to form a new chronology of early metal production on the European continent, which according to the authors laid the very foundation for the formation of a processual archaeology in European archaeology. Their argument is, in short, that where Childe had explained the emergence of metallurgy in Europe by migrations from Mesopotamia, the Aegean etc., Renfrew on the other hand saw technological developments realized through ‘indigenous social and economic forces’ (p. 7). Thus, systems theory in processual archaeology, combined with radiometric dating methods, had a profound effect on European prehistory. However, even studies in processual archaeology, and particularly through the application of World Systems modelling, also came to recognize certain ‘core’ and ‘peripheral’ geographical regions in Europe during the Bronze Age due to the restricted distribution of artefacts and technologies, which could be observed in the empirical record. These observations reflected to some extent observations made by the cultural historical research paradigm, and thus, long after the works of Childe, there came a renewed focus on supraregional systems of material exchange in the Bronze Age, and the formation of regionally situated political elites (such as Kristiansen and","PeriodicalId":45030,"journal":{"name":"Norwegian Archaeological Review","volume":"56 1","pages":"113 - 115"},"PeriodicalIF":0.8000,"publicationDate":"2023-01-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"3","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"From Stonehenge to Mycenae. 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More specifically, the book addresses ‘the archaeology of two regions that were once linked by the diffusionist narratives that Colin Renfrew recognized as no longer being viable’ and the two regions are, as indicated by the title, the area surrounding Stonehenge and Aegean during the second and third millenniums BCE. The main challenge of archaeological interpretation that From Stonehenge to Mycenae focuses on is the one emerging from the relation between two types of archaeological evidence. On the one hand, there is that evidence which pertains to mobility in the past, or what was previously referred to as ‘diffusion’ in archaeology, and on the other hand there is that which pertains to regional continuity in cultural traditions. This general theme is also probably what makes the book itself so alluring, no matter what background the reader has, and the authors do a good job in situating their work within the now well-known research history of processual and postprocessual archaeology. From their view, which it should be mentioned is firmly UK-based (Sheffield and Cambridge), the first important contribution to our knowledge of European prehistory during this period was made by V. G Childe in the late 1950s, when he connected the archaeology of different regions of Europe and Western Asia through diffusionist and rather schematic models. This was the state of the art in European prehistory before the advent of radiocarbon dating, which we know had a tremendous impact on chronologies. The second contribution, in these author’s view, was made by Colin Renfrew in the 1970s, when he used results from radiocarbon dating to form a new chronology of early metal production on the European continent, which according to the authors laid the very foundation for the formation of a processual archaeology in European archaeology. Their argument is, in short, that where Childe had explained the emergence of metallurgy in Europe by migrations from Mesopotamia, the Aegean etc., Renfrew on the other hand saw technological developments realized through ‘indigenous social and economic forces’ (p. 7). Thus, systems theory in processual archaeology, combined with radiometric dating methods, had a profound effect on European prehistory. 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引用次数: 3
摘要
我很少遇到涉及两种据称不相关的史前现象的书,但它仍然成功地吸引了我的全部学术注意力。从巨石阵到迈锡尼。约翰·巴雷特(John C.Barrett)和迈克尔·J·博伊德(Michael J.Boyd)的《考古解释的挑战》(The Challenges of Archaeological Interpretation)是其中另一本罕见的书。这甚至是一篇相当小的文章,共有169页的文本和45幅插图,主题集中在欧洲史前史的知识生产和考古解释的挑战上。更具体地说,这本书讲述了“两个地区的考古,这两个地区曾经被科林·伦弗认为不再可行的传播主义叙事联系在一起”,正如标题所示,这两地区是公元前两千年和三千年巨石阵和爱琴海周围的地区。《从巨石阵到迈锡尼》所关注的考古解释的主要挑战是两类考古证据之间的关系。一方面,有证据与过去的流动性有关,或者以前在考古学中被称为“扩散”,另一方面,也有证据与文化传统的区域连续性有关。无论读者有什么背景,这个总的主题也可能是这本书本身如此吸引人的原因,作者们很好地将他们的工作置于现在众所周知的过程和后过程考古学的研究史中。从他们的观点来看,这一时期我们对欧洲史前史的第一个重要贡献是由V.G Childe在20世纪50年代末做出的,当时他通过扩散主义和相当示意性的模型将欧洲和西亚不同地区的考古学联系起来。这是欧洲史前史上放射性碳测年出现之前的最先进水平,我们知道这对年表产生了巨大影响。在这些作者看来,第二个贡献是科林·伦弗雷在20世纪70年代做出的,当时他利用放射性碳测年的结果形成了欧洲大陆早期金属生产的新年表,据作者称,这为欧洲考古学中形成过程考古学奠定了基础。简言之,他们的论点是,Childe通过从美索不达米亚、爱琴海等地迁移来解释欧洲冶金业的出现,而Renfrew则通过“本土社会和经济力量”实现了技术发展(第7页)。因此,过程考古学中的系统理论与辐射测年方法相结合,对欧洲史前史产生了深远的影响。然而,即使是过程考古学的研究,特别是通过应用世界系统建模,也开始认识到青铜时代欧洲的某些“核心”和“外围”地理区域,因为人工制品和技术的分布受到限制,这可以在经验记录中观察到。这些观察在一定程度上反映了文化历史研究范式的观察,因此,在Childe的作品之后很久,人们重新关注青铜时代的超区域物质交换系统,以及区域政治精英的形成(如Kristiansen和
From Stonehenge to Mycenae. The Challenges of Archaeological Interpretation
It is not often I come across books that are concerned with two supposedly unrelated prehistoric phenomena, but which still succeeds in capturing my full scholarly attention. From Stonehenge to Mycenae. The Challenges of Archaeological Interpretation by John C. Barrett and Michael J. Boyd is another one of these rare books. It is even a rather tiny piece, with a total of 169 pages of text and 45 illustrations, focused thematically on the knowledge production of European prehistory and the challenges of archaeological interpretation. More specifically, the book addresses ‘the archaeology of two regions that were once linked by the diffusionist narratives that Colin Renfrew recognized as no longer being viable’ and the two regions are, as indicated by the title, the area surrounding Stonehenge and Aegean during the second and third millenniums BCE. The main challenge of archaeological interpretation that From Stonehenge to Mycenae focuses on is the one emerging from the relation between two types of archaeological evidence. On the one hand, there is that evidence which pertains to mobility in the past, or what was previously referred to as ‘diffusion’ in archaeology, and on the other hand there is that which pertains to regional continuity in cultural traditions. This general theme is also probably what makes the book itself so alluring, no matter what background the reader has, and the authors do a good job in situating their work within the now well-known research history of processual and postprocessual archaeology. From their view, which it should be mentioned is firmly UK-based (Sheffield and Cambridge), the first important contribution to our knowledge of European prehistory during this period was made by V. G Childe in the late 1950s, when he connected the archaeology of different regions of Europe and Western Asia through diffusionist and rather schematic models. This was the state of the art in European prehistory before the advent of radiocarbon dating, which we know had a tremendous impact on chronologies. The second contribution, in these author’s view, was made by Colin Renfrew in the 1970s, when he used results from radiocarbon dating to form a new chronology of early metal production on the European continent, which according to the authors laid the very foundation for the formation of a processual archaeology in European archaeology. Their argument is, in short, that where Childe had explained the emergence of metallurgy in Europe by migrations from Mesopotamia, the Aegean etc., Renfrew on the other hand saw technological developments realized through ‘indigenous social and economic forces’ (p. 7). Thus, systems theory in processual archaeology, combined with radiometric dating methods, had a profound effect on European prehistory. However, even studies in processual archaeology, and particularly through the application of World Systems modelling, also came to recognize certain ‘core’ and ‘peripheral’ geographical regions in Europe during the Bronze Age due to the restricted distribution of artefacts and technologies, which could be observed in the empirical record. These observations reflected to some extent observations made by the cultural historical research paradigm, and thus, long after the works of Childe, there came a renewed focus on supraregional systems of material exchange in the Bronze Age, and the formation of regionally situated political elites (such as Kristiansen and
期刊介绍:
Norwegian Archaeological Review published since 1968, aims to be an interface between archaeological research in the Nordic countries and global archaeological trends, a meeting ground for current discussion of theoretical and methodical problems on an international scientific level. The main focus is on the European area, but discussions based upon results from other parts of the world are also welcomed. The comments of specialists, along with the author"s reply, are given as an addendum to selected articles. The Journal is also receptive to uninvited opinions and comments on a wider scope of archaeological themes, e.g. articles in Norwegian Archaeological Review or other journals, monographies, conferences.