scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessBook

The Archaeology of Ethnicity: Constructing Identities in the Past and Present

Siân Jones
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
Sian Jones as mentioned in this paper argues for a fundamentally different view of ethnicity, as a complex dynamic form of identification, requiring radical changes in archaeological analysis and interpretation, and presents a comprehensive and critical synthesis of recent theories of ethnicity in the human sciences.
Abstract
The question of ethnicity is highly controversial in contemporary archaeology. Indigenous and nationalist claims to territory, often rely on reconstructions of the past based on the traditional identification of 'cultures' from archaeological remains. Sian Jones responds to the need for a reassessment of the ways in which social groups are identified in the archaeological record, with a comprehensive and critical synthesis of recent theories of ethnicity in the human sciences. In doing so, she argues for a fundamentally different view of ethnicity, as a complex dynamic form of identification, requiring radical changes in archaeological analysis and interpretation.

read more

Citations
More filters
Dissertation

Exchange in Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age (EBA) Ireland: Connecting people, objects and ideas

TL;DR: The Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age (EBA) in Ireland were periods of great flux, out of which and into which, novel technologies and institutions emerged and were transmitted.
Book ChapterDOI

Fine if I Do, Fine if I Don’t. Dynamics of Technical Knowledge in Sub-Saharan Africa

TL;DR: In our "global village," things and practices are currently diffused over such large areas that few, if any, relationships seem to exist anymore between their spatial distribution and salient cultural boundaries as discussed by the authors.
Dissertation

The Britons in late antiquity : power, identity and ethnicity

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focus on the creation of both British ethnic or national identity and Brittonic regional/dynastic identities in the Roman and early medieval periods, and examine the extent to which the Britons were incorporated into the provincial framework and subsequently ordered and defined themselves as an imperial people.
Journal ArticleDOI

Primordialism and the 'Pleistocene San' of southern Africa

TL;DR: The Kalahari San are frequently depicted in introductory texts as archetypal, mobile hunter-gatherers, and they have influenced approaches to archaeological, genetic and linguistic research.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cosmological Enburance: Pagan Identities in Early Christian Europe

TL;DR: In this paper, the Germanic peoples of the Migration Period in Early Chiristian Europe (c., AD 400-500) created or preserved a pagan Scandinavian myth of their origin as a, significant part of their identity and perception.