Decisive Evidence for Multidirectional Evolution of Sociopolitical Complexity in Southern Africa

被引:23
作者
Chirikure, Shadreck [1 ]
Bandama, Foreman [1 ]
House, Michelle [1 ]
Moffett, Abigail [1 ]
Mukwende, Tawanda [1 ]
Pollard, Mark [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Cape Town, Dept Archaeol, ZA-7925 Cape Town, South Africa
[2] Univ Oxford, Res Lab Hist Art & Archaeol, Oxford, England
基金
新加坡国家研究基金会;
关键词
Multilinear evolution of complexity; Northeastern Botswana; Southwestern Zimbabwe; Mapela; Great Zimbabwe; Southern Africa; IRON-AGE; GREAT ZIMBABWE; ARCHAEOLOGY; MAPUNGUBWE; CHRONOLOGY; PATHWAYS; HISTORY; POWER;
D O I
10.1007/s10437-016-9215-1
中图分类号
Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
030303 ;
摘要
While pioneers of archaeology in any given region have established the foundations of the discipline, their views have not remained unchanged in places such as Europe, North America and Australasia. In these regions, successive generations of researchers changed the direction of their work based not just on new observations but also in light of new methods and theories. For example, the idea of a Bronze Age revolution popularised by V. G. Childe in Europe was superseded by multiple alternatives over the years. In southern African Iron Age studies, John Schofield, Gertrude Caton-Thompson, Roger Summers, Keith Robinson and Peter Garlake created an impressive platform upon which successors could build. Confronting firm disapproval from more experienced researchers in the early 1980s, Huffman speculated that the evolution of sociopolitical complexity in our region was a linear relay from Mapungubwe to Khami via Great Zimbabwe. This position was sustained as the conventional wisdom largely, we argue, because no new research was being carried out in key areas of the region, and too few students, in particular African ones, were being trained to expand the focus of investigation. Here, we present new data to support our argument, that the pathway to sociopolitical complexity in southern Africa was multilinear. We propose looking forward rather than back, and to continue to seek the exposure of scales of interaction between multiple but chronologically overlapping entities associated with the rise of sociopolitical complexity in southern Africa.
引用
收藏
页码:75 / 95
页数:21
相关论文
共 70 条
[1]  
Beach D, 1997, S AFR ARCHAEOL BULL, V52, P125, DOI 10.2307/3889078
[2]   Cognitive archaeology and imaginary history at Great Zimbabwe [J].
Beach, D .
CURRENT ANTHROPOLOGY, 1998, 39 (01) :47-72
[3]  
Beach D.N., 1994, ZIMBABWEAN SHONA DYN
[4]  
Beach D.N., 1980, The Shona and Zimbabwe, 900-1850: An Outline of Shona History
[5]  
Beach D. N., 1984, ZIMBABWE BEFORE 1900
[6]  
Bourdillon M. F. C., 1998, CURR ANTHROPOL, V39, P47
[7]  
Bronk R. C., 1994, ARCHAEOLOGICAL COMPU, V41, P11
[8]  
Caton-Thompson G., 1931, ZIMBABWE CULTURE RUI
[9]   Zimbabwe Culture before Mapungubwe: New Evidence from Mapela Hill, South-Western Zimbabwe [J].
Chirikure, Shadreck ;
Manyanga, Munyaradzi ;
Pollard, A. Mark ;
Bandama, Foreman ;
Mahachi, Godfrey ;
Pikirayi, Innocent .
PLOS ONE, 2014, 9 (10)
[10]   New Pathways of Sociopolitical Complexity in Southern Africa [J].
Chirikure, Shadreck ;
Manyanga, Munyaradzi ;
Pikirayi, Innocent ;
Pollard, Mark .
AFRICAN ARCHAEOLOGICAL REVIEW, 2013, 30 (04) :339-366