Archaeology, Language, and History - John Edward Terrell

Archaeology, Language, and History

Essays on Culture and Ethnicity
Buch | Hardcover
328 Seiten
2001
Praeger Publishers Inc (Verlag)
978-0-89789-724-2 (ISBN)
87,25 inkl. MwSt
A discussion of the complex issues and theoretical arguments regarding whether race, language and culture go together. The essays seek to show that we should stop thinking that they do go together, and why we should be wary of the belief that people come from different biological lineages.
Ever since Darwin, the world has been struggling with the mystery of human diversity. As the historian Peter Bowler has written, an evolutionary interpretation of the history of life on the earth must inevitably extend itself to include the origins of the human race. But this has proved to be a difficult and controversial task. Understanding human origins means accounting not only for the obvious differences between people and cultures around the world, but also for the unity of Homo sapiens as a single biological species. As Stephen Jay Gould has said, flexibility is the hallmark of human evolution. Because so much of who we are is learned rather than genetically predetermined, a satisfactory understanding of human evolution--to use old parlance--must account both for the human body and the human soul.



At any single moment of time, it is always possible to find instances where people seem to live in their own world, speak in their own distinctive ways, and have their own exclusive cultural traits and practices. Over the course of time, however, it is not so easy to find places where these dimensions of our diversity stay together. The essays in this collection show why we must stop thinking that race, language, and culture go together, and why we should be wary of the commonsense beliefs that human races exist and that people who speak different languages come from fundamentally different biological lineages.

JOHN EDWARD TERRELL is Curator of Oceanic Archaeology and Ethnology at the Field Museum of Natural History and Adjunct Professor of Anthropology, University of Illinois, Chicago./e

Introduction by John Edward Terrell The Uncommon Sense of Race, Language, and Culture by John Edward Terrell Ethnogenetic Patterns in Native North America by John H. Moore Soviet Ethnogenetic Theory and the Interpretation of the Past by Richard W. Lindstrom Setting the Boundaries: Linguistics, Ethnicity, Colonialism, and Archaeology South of Lake Chad by Scott MacEachern Manchu-Tungusic and Culture Change Among Manchu-Tungusic Peoples by Lindsay J. Whaley Recognizing Ethnic Identity in the Upper Pleistocene: The Case of the African Middle Stone Age/Middle Paleolithic by Pamela R. Willoughby Demography, Ethnography, and Archaeo-Linguistic Evidence: A Study of Celtic and Germanic from Prehistory into the Early Historical Period by John Hines Contexts of Change in Holocene Britain: Genes, Language, and Archaeology by Martin Paul Evison Ethnolinguistic Groups, Language Boundaries, and Culture History: A Sociolinguistic Model by John Edward Terrell Identity and Contact in Three Jewish Languages by Mark R.V. Southern Languages on the Land: Toward an Anthropological Dialectology by Jane H. Hill Language, Culture, and Community Boundaries Around the Huon Gulf of New Guinea by Joel Bradshaw Index

Erscheint lt. Verlag 28.2.2001
Sprache englisch
Themenwelt Geisteswissenschaften Archäologie
Geisteswissenschaften Sprach- / Literaturwissenschaft Sprachwissenschaft
Naturwissenschaften Biologie Evolution
Sozialwissenschaften Ethnologie
Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie
ISBN-10 0-89789-724-2 / 0897897242
ISBN-13 978-0-89789-724-2 / 9780897897242
Zustand Neuware
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