1 / 19

Prehistoric tipping points:

Prehistoric tipping points:. Fashioning The Past From The Present. James Walker & David Clinnick Durham University Archaeology Department. What do archaeologists do?. Defined by how we work: Study the past, primarily through it’s material remains.

chelsey
Télécharger la présentation

Prehistoric tipping points:

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Prehistoric tipping points: Fashioning The Past From The Present James Walker & David Clinnick Durham University Archaeology Department

  2. What do archaeologists do? • Defined by how we work: Study the past, primarily through it’s material remains. Defined by our objectives: To improve our understanding of humans in the past and the chronology of events. Increasingly diverse and interdisciplinary in our efforts to reconcile the shortcomings of our methods and data with our aspirations.

  3. Prehistory: (It’s when all the best tipping points happened)

  4. Why is prehistory different? • We don’t have the benefit of historical sources. We deal with a vast time period. The “impact“ of prehistory is markedly reduced. Different datasets require different methodologies, and different methodologies answer different questions.

  5. Our limitations shape our perceptions • Because we can do something, it’s importance is elevated.

  6. TIPPING POINTS AND REVOLUTIONS • Many different ways of theorising aboutchange. Different conceptualisations come with different jargon. Revolutions were a popular conceptualisation of large scale changes in prehistory.

  7. TIPPING POINTS AND REVOLUTIONS • Many different ways of theorising aboutchange. Different conceptualisations come with different jargon. Revolutions were a popular conceptualisation of large scale changes in prehistory.

  8. TIPPING POINTS AND REVOLUTIONS • Many different ways of theorising about change. Different conceptualisations come with different jargon. Revolutions were a popular conceptualisation of large scale changes in prehistory. Pre-Farming Societies Farming Societies

  9. TIPPING POINTS AND REVOLUTIONS • Many different ways of theorising aboutchange. Different conceptualisations come with different jargon. Revolutions were a popular conceptualisation of large scale changes in prehistory. Pre-Farming Societies Farming Societies

  10. TIPPING POINTS AND REVOLUTIONS • Many different ways of theorising aboutchange. Different conceptualisations come with different jargon. Revolutions were a popular conceptualisation of large scale changes in prehistory. Pre-Farming Societies Farming Societies

  11. TIPPING POINTS AND REVOLUTIONS • Many different ways of theorising about change. Different conceptualisations come with different jargon. Revolutions were a popular conceptualisation of large scale changes in prehistory. Pre-Farming Societies Farming Societies

  12. 1) The mesolithic / neolithic transition2) The upper palaeolithic transition • 1) The transition from hunting and gathering to farming. • 2) The transition from archaic humans to modern humans. • Host of other changesassociated with these events. • No longer seen as ‘revolutions’, but tipping points nevertheless. • Significant to them… • Significant to us. “Hey, what can I say? Farming has been good to me.”

  13. Mesolithic Complexity • At the end of the last ice age (LGM), hunter-gatherer modes of life were vastly different – which is why we make the distinction of calling it something else. We characterise the increasing rate of change in Mesolithic Europe as the emergence of complex hunter-gatherer societies, often as a preface to the adoption of agriculture. There is a huge amount of debate as to just what we mean by complexity!

  14. Pre-Farming Societies Farming Societies • Not all changes are: • - Linear • - Unprecedented • - Slow • None are inherently progressive in nature or bound to the idea of preparing for agriculture.

  15. Modern Pre-Modern

  16. Pre-Farming Societies / Pre-Modern Farming Societies / Modern • With the origins of these events set in mind as a pre-eminent tipping point in prehistory, we risk viewing developments through a back-filter. • In viewing the Mesolithic as a period of accelerating complexity, we run the risk of assuming “pre-adaptation” as a viable explanation. • Alternatively, with discussions of modernity, we actually negate the possibility of it existing in archaic populations.

  17. Prehistory: (It’s when we decide all the best tipping points happened)

  18. Fashioning the past from the present • Understanding tipping points in the past is at the very heart of what archaeologists strive towards. • The tipping points we identify in the past are decided upon in the present, and in this sense we are at risk of predetermining and even negating the historical trajectories and modes of adaptation that may have taken place in the past.

More Related