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Journal ArticleDOI

Ceramic Theory and Cultural Process. Dean Arnold. Cambridge University Press, New Studies in Archaeology, C. Renfrew and J. Sabloff, series editors, Cambridge, 1985. xi + 268 pp., figures, tables, biblio., index. $37.50 (cloth).

TLDR
Arnabels et al. as discussed by the authors present a rich array of data on clay sources, climate, subsistence practices, workload scheduling, division of labor, social status, and economic complexity.
Abstract
In ceramic studies, as in other fields, there is a periodic need for synthesis: a need to assess the accumulated data and wring from them a semblance of order, a need to systematize. This need is met, for now, by Arnold's book—a well-illustrated and cogently argued discourse on ceramic ecology. In creating it he assembles a world-embracing array of data on clay sources, climate, subsistence practices, workload scheduling, division of labor, social status, and economic complexity. He draws upon general systems theory and a cultural ecological perspective to organize this seemingly diverse array of data and focus them upon the practice of potting. Frankly, I am surprised and relieved that he does so without using ponderous jargon. The book opens with a crisp overview of the author's chosen subject and a statement of his position on issues of epistemology, theory, and evidence. His position on ceramic types and varieties, and his view of the cogency of ceramic evidence for inferring past patterns of social and political organization will trouble some of my colleagues. Some, I suppose, will simply choose to ignore them, but as his copious examples in the following chapters illustrate they will do so at their own and their profession's peril. In the first of seven substantive chapters Arnold addresses clay, water, and fuel quality, quantity, and distribution to assess their threshold effect on the appearance, intensification, and spread of pottery production or aspects thereof. He follows this with a well-conceived chapter on weather and climate as regulatory mechanisms with respect to crucial steps and . stages in the scheduling of ceramic manufacturing tasks and the cost effectiveness of special production techniques and facilities. The next three chapters are devoted to the scheduling conflicts that stem from the interrelations among climate, resource distribution, subsistence practices, and population size as these are mediated by the sexual division of labor, the emergence of craft specialization, and the level of demand for products of the potter's effort. Chapter seven focuses upon the specific consequences of population growth and population pressure for the spread and diversification of potting as an income-producing craft and chapter eight upon those technological innovations that make potting a more efficient income producer. To his credit, Arnold neglects neither the natural nor the cultural barriers that innovators encounter in attempts to enhance their efficiency and increase their income. In the final chapter Arnold models the environmental forces that shape potting as it takes the form of a domestic chore, a household craft, and a workshop industry. If there is a shortcoming here it is not Arnold's but an atomistic tendency in the systems approach itself, a tendency to see motion as a consequence of the interaction among entities rather than an integral part of the system, a tendency to emphasize being rather than becoming and structure rather than structuring. He concludes, rightfully enough, with some intriguing and potentially potent suggestions for his archaeological colleagues, suggestions that I, for one, do not think we can afford to ignore.

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Citations
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The challenge of ‘technological choices’for materials science approaches in archaeology*

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Early Pastoralists in East Africa: Ecological and Social Dimensions

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Accumulations research: Problems and prospects for estimating site occupation span

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used data from the Duckfoot site in southwestern Colorado to develop an annual accumulation rate of cooking pot sherds for households, along with population estimates and estimates of the total cooking Pot sherd accumulation, to determine the occupation span of five sites located in the nearby Dolores River valley.
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Towards computerized typology and classification of ceramics

TL;DR: The main ideas which distinguish the method are described, and its applicability is demonstrated by presenting the analysis of two assemblages of Iron Age ceramics from sites in Israel.
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Ceramics, seeds and culinary change in prehistoric India

TL;DR: The evidence from actual words for food is also used, together with seed assemblages and types of pottery to chronicle changing food cultures in Neolithic and later India as mentioned in this paper.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The challenge of ‘technological choices’for materials science approaches in archaeology*

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that both materials scientists and archaeologists have gained much and have much to gain by cooperating together to study ancient technologies, and that the concept of "technological choices" can facilitate a wider consideration of the factors shaping technological developments.
Journal ArticleDOI

Early Pastoralists in East Africa: Ecological and Social Dimensions

TL;DR: In this paper, the development of economies based on nonindigenous domestic cattle, sheep, goats, and donkeys in eastern Africa from the Lake Turkana basin south is discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Accumulations research: Problems and prospects for estimating site occupation span

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used data from the Duckfoot site in southwestern Colorado to develop an annual accumulation rate of cooking pot sherds for households, along with population estimates and estimates of the total cooking Pot sherd accumulation, to determine the occupation span of five sites located in the nearby Dolores River valley.
Journal ArticleDOI

Towards computerized typology and classification of ceramics

TL;DR: The main ideas which distinguish the method are described, and its applicability is demonstrated by presenting the analysis of two assemblages of Iron Age ceramics from sites in Israel.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ceramics, seeds and culinary change in prehistoric India

TL;DR: The evidence from actual words for food is also used, together with seed assemblages and types of pottery to chronicle changing food cultures in Neolithic and later India as mentioned in this paper.