From Stonehenge to Mycenae: The Challenges of Archaeological Interpretation

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This book reconsiders how we can understand archaeology on a grand scale by abandoning the claims that material remains stand for the people and institutions that produced them, or that genetic change somehow caused cultural change. Our challenge is to understand the worlds that made great projects like the building of Stonehenge or Mycenae possible. The radiocarbon revolution made the old view that the architecture of Mycenae influenced the building of Stonehenge untenable. But the recent use of 'big data' and of genetic histories have led archaeology back to a worldview where 'big problems' are assumed to require 'big solutions'. Making an animated plea for bottom-up rather than top-down solutions, the authors consider how life was made possible by living in the local and materially distinct worlds of the period. By considering how people once built connections between each other through their production and use of things, their movement between and occupancy of places, and their treatment of the dead, we learn about the kinds of identities that people constructed for themselves. Stonehenge did not require an architect from Mycenae for it to be built, but the builders of Stonehenge and Mycenae would have shared a mutual recognition of the kinds of humans that they were, and the kinds of practices these monuments were once host to.

Author(s): John C. Barrett; Michael J. Boyd
Series: Debates in Archaeology
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Year: 2019

Language: English
Commentary: With a foreword by Colin Renfrew.
Pages: xiv, 202
City: London, UK ; New York, NY
Tags: Prehistoric peoples--Europe; Social archaeology--Europe; Archaeology--Philosophy; Archaeology--Methodology; Europe--Antiquities; Stonehenge (England); Mycenae (Extinct city); Europe, Western--Relations--Aegean Sea Region; Aegean Sea Region--Relations--Europe, Western.

List of Figures viii
Foreword: ‘Obscurity and Oblivion’? The Challenge of Interpreting the Prehistoric Past Colin Renfrew xi

Introduction 1
1 Archaeological Approaches to Stonehenge 11
2 The Emergence of an Aegean Civilization 27
3 Living with Things: The Politics of Identity 41
4 Things that Mattered: Identity in the Production, Exchange and Use of Materials 53
5 Places that Mattered: Movement and Belonging 91
6 Bodies that Mattered: The Role of the Dead 127
7 Living amongst Things: Practice, Place and Identity in Expanding Worlds 165

References 171
Index 195