Cover image for Beyond Subsistence : Plains Archaeology and the Postprocessual Critique.
Beyond Subsistence : Plains Archaeology and the Postprocessual Critique.
Title:
Beyond Subsistence : Plains Archaeology and the Postprocessual Critique.
Author:
Krause, Richard A.
ISBN:
9780817383640
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (320 pages)
Contents:
Contents -- Preface -- Introduction: Postprocessualism and Plains Archaeology -- Part I: Conceptual and Theoretical Perspectives -- 1. Processual and Postprocessual Archaeology: A Brief Critical Review -- 2. We Do Not Need Your Past! Politics, Indian Time, and Plains Archaeology -- 3. Beyond Hearth and Home on the Range: Feminist Approaches to Plains Archaeology -- 4. Taxonomic Determinism in Evolutionary Theory: Another Model of Multilinear Cultural Evolution with an Example from the Plains -- 5. Predictive Modeling and Cultural Resource Management: An Alternative View from the Plains Periphery -- Part II: Building Alternative Archaeologies -- 6. Social and Political Causes for the Emergence of Intensive Agriculture in Eastern North America -- 7. Great Plains Mound Building: A Postprocessual View -- 8. Sing Away the Buffalo: Faction and Fission on the Northern Plains -- 9. The Household as a Portable Mnemonic Landscape: Archaeological Implications for Plains Stone Circle Sites -- 10. Medicine Wheels on the Northern Plains: Contexts, Codes, and Symbols -- 11. Projectile Points as Cultural Symbols: Ethnography and Archaeology -- Part III: Commentary -- 12. Paradigm in the Rough -- 13. Fighting Back on the Plains -- References -- Contributors -- Index.
Abstract:
This volume presents a series of essays, written by Plains scholars of diverse research interests and backgrounds, that apply postprocessual approaches to the solution of current problems in Plains archaeology. Postprocessual archaeology is seen as a potential vehicle for integrating culture-historical, processual, and postmodernist approaches to solve specific archaeological problems. The contributors address specific interpretive problems in all the major regions of the North American Plains, investigate different Plains societies (including hunter-gatherers and farmers and their associated archaeological records), and examine the political content of archaeology in such fields as gender studies and cultural resource management. They avoid a programmatic adherence to a single paradigm, arguing instead that a mature archaeology will use different theories, methods, and techniques to solve specific empirical problems. By avoiding excessive infatuation with the correct scientific method, this volume addresses questions that have often been categorized as beyond archaeological investigations. Contributors inlcude: Philip Duke, Michael C. Wilson, Alice B. Kehoe, Larry J. Zimmerman, Mary K. Whelan, Patricia J. O'Brien, Monica Bargielski Weimer, David W. Benn, Richard A. Krause, James F. Brooks, Neil A. Mirau, Miranda Warburton, Melissa A. Connor, and Ian Hodder.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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