Tilling Nature - Harvesting Culture. Exploring Images of the Human Being in the Transition to Agriculture.
Author
Summary, in English
Archaeology is about human beings – in the present and in the past. When we concern ourselves with archaeology we have to imagine prehistoric human beings thinking, feeling and acting. This imagining is the very precondition for the creation of meaning from the fragments and traces of human lives that we choose as our data. What kind of images of human beings do we create through the writing and reading of archaeological texts? From where do these images come? How are they created, and what implications do they have for our understanding of the past – and of the present? This study is devoted to these and other related questions.
The questions are focused on a specific archaeological problem: the origins of agriculture. It is hardly an exaggeration to say that this is the most mythically charged theme in Western archaeology. Agricultural origins concerns Western identity. During the last two or three centuries, countries in the Western world have been transformed from agricultural societies to modern industrialised societies. The nostalgia for disappearing life-styles and contemporary concerns with environmental issues are probably the most important reasons for the vast archaeological interest in agricultural origins during the twentieth century.
This work investigates how the origins of agriculture has been defined, debated, deconstructed, restated, renamed and revived. The intention is to yield insights into the relation between images of the present, images of the past and images of the human being.
The questions are focused on a specific archaeological problem: the origins of agriculture. It is hardly an exaggeration to say that this is the most mythically charged theme in Western archaeology. Agricultural origins concerns Western identity. During the last two or three centuries, countries in the Western world have been transformed from agricultural societies to modern industrialised societies. The nostalgia for disappearing life-styles and contemporary concerns with environmental issues are probably the most important reasons for the vast archaeological interest in agricultural origins during the twentieth century.
This work investigates how the origins of agriculture has been defined, debated, deconstructed, restated, renamed and revived. The intention is to yield insights into the relation between images of the present, images of the past and images of the human being.
Department/s
Publishing year
2000
Language
English
Publication/Series
Acta Archaeologica Lundensia. Series in 8°
Volume
32
Document type
Dissertation
Publisher
Almqvist & Wiksell International
Topic
- Archaeology
Keywords
- archaeological theory
- origins of agriculture
- gender
- primitivism
- human nature
- modernism
- Archaeology
- Arkeologi
Status
Published
Supervisor
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 0065-0994
- ISBN: 91-22-01872-7
- ISRN: LUHFDA/HFAR--00/1038--SE+298
Defence date
25 May 2000
Defence time
13:15
Defence place
Edens hörsal, Paradisgatan
Opponent
- Ian Hodder (Professor)