CfP Innsbruck 2023 - The Alps in the 1st millenium BC (original) (raw)
Die Alpen im 1. Jt. v. Chr. / The Alps in the 1st millenium BC / Les Alpes au premier millénaire av. J.-C. / Le Alpi nel 1° millennio a.C.
Research into the recent prehistory of the Alpine region can look back on a long tradition. Due to outstanding preservation conditions, many sites are among the most intensively investigated of European prehistory and have provided important impulses to researchers. However, these sites are acutely endangered not only by ground disturbances, but also by erosion, vegetation change, and climate change. The specific natural conditions of the varied study area promise multisided insights into questions of man-environment relations as well as development and use of space and resources, but also require extensive, interdisciplinary and innovative research approaches. In addition to prospection and excavation, research on ancient roads, monitoring, and climate reconstruction play an important role. In the interplay of (pre-)historical use and archaeological research, the Alpine region therefore represents a link of international research for the archaeology of the 1st millennium BC, allowing for unique insights into the living environments of the Late Bronze and Iron Ages.
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OSPA - Open Series in Prehistoric Archaeology No. 3, 2023
OPEN ACCESS: https://www.sidestone.com/books/keramik-jenseits-von-kulturen Mobility is fundamental to forms of social configurations. But what role did spatial mobility play in the past? Regarding prehistoric periods, such as the Neolithic, we still do know little about this. That also applies to the settlement areas of the northern Alpine Foreland. The wetland settlements there were labelled UNESCO World Heritage in 2011. With their excellently preserved remains in lakes and bogs they provide a unique research basis. The dendrochronologically dated settlements open a rare possibility to approach cultural, social, and economic processes based on a high temporal and spatial resolution. In the present volume, this is achieved based on pottery from contemporaneously dated settlements on Lake Zurich and Lake Constance from the period between 3950 and 3800 BC. Process philosophical considerations on the (trans)formation of ‘things’ are combined with relational social theoretical concepts such as the habitus theorem to form a praxeological approach. The latter serves as the epistemological basis of the newly elaborated mixed method research methodology, which allows for a deeper understanding of mobility, social relations and configurations as well as transformations. Qualitative methods (classification of vessel designs) is utilised to understand pottery production practices from the perspective of the makers and quantitative methods (cluster analysis of vessel features) can be used to analyse transregional structures of ceramic consumption. Accordingly, patterns of spatial mobility and far-reaching relationships of settlement communities become apparent based on such material entanglements. Mobility-related appropriation phenomena and change in pottery practices can be approached in the rhythm of individual decades. Furthermore, the combination of a subjectivist with an ‘objectified’ stance during the research process based on Pierre Bourdieu’s epistemology, the praxeology, leads to an epistemological, metamodern ‘third way’ that mediates between the realism of modernity (processual archaeology) and the constructivism of postmodernity (post-processual archaeology). Finally, the research results deconstruct the common social models following the cultural-historical paradigm, which conceptualized ‘cultures’ as supposedly static, homogeneous, spatially distinct entities. Instead, the pottery points to translocal social configurations that related settlements in the northern Alpine Foreland with each other in the 4th millennium BC.
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