Materiality and Consumption in the Bronze Age Mediterranean

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A01=Louise Steel
Aegean
Amenhotep III
anthropology
Author_Louise Steel
Ayia Triada
Bronze Age
Bronze Age Mediterranean
Category=NKA
Category=NKD
communities
Cyprus
East Mediterranean
Egypt
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
Hala Sultan Tekke
hybridization
Kalavasos Ayios Dhimitrios
Kamares Ware
Late Bronze Age
Late Bronze Age Cyprus
Late Cypriot
LC II
Levant
material culture
Material World
Millennium BC
Mycenaean Figurines
Mycenaean Pottery
Neopalatial Period
objects
Peak Sanctuaries
Ramesses III
Social Reproduction
Steel 2004a
Sweet Oils
Thirteenth Century BC
Thutmose III
Ulu Burun Shipwreck

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415537346
  • Weight: 680g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 19 Dec 2012
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The importance of cultural contacts in the East Mediterranean has long been recognized and is the focus of ongoing international research. Fieldwork in the Aegean, Egypt, Cyprus, and the Levant continues to add to our understanding of the nature of this contact and its social and economic significance, particularly to the cultures of the Aegean. Despite sophisticated discussion of the archaeological evidence, in particular on the part of Aegean and Mediterranean archaeologists, there has been little systematic attempt to incorporate anthropological perspectives on materiality and exchange into archaeological narratives of this material. This book addresses that gap and integrates anthropological discourse on contact, examining exchange systems, the gift, notions of geographical distance and power, colonization, and hybridization. Furthermore, it develops a social narrative of culture contact in the Mediterranean context, illustrating the reasons communities chose to engage in international exchange, and how this impacted the construction of identities throughout the region.

While traditional archaeologies in the East Mediterranean have tended to be reductive in their approach to material culture and how it was produced, used, and exchanged, this book reviews current research on material culture, focusing on issues such as the biography of objects, inalienable possessions, and hybridization – exploring how these issues can further illuminate the material world of the communities of the Bronze Age Mediterranean.

Part I: Introduction 1. Anthropological Perspectives on Culture Contact Part II: Hybrid Communities 2. Colonies in the Bronze Age Mediterranean 3. Hybridization Part III: Perspectives on Bronze Age Exchange 4. Greeting Gifts 5. Mercantile Exchange Part IV: The Material World 6. Craft and the Kingly Ideal 7. Materiality and the Biography of Objects Part V: Concluding Remarks

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