New book chronicle.
Scarre, Chris ; Witcher, Robert
The February issue of Antiquity heralds some significant changes: a
new publisher, increased frequency of publication and developments to
our website. NBC will continue as a regular feature, aiming to cover
more or less the same number of books across six, rather than four,
issues. That said, in this current issue, NBC adopts a slightly
different form, one devoted not to the usual melange of new titles, but
to a single--if massive--publication.
Encyclopedia of global archaeology
CLAIRE SMITH (ed.). Encyclopedia of global archaeology. 11 volumes.
8015 pages, 2619 colour and b&w illustrations, 106 tables. 2014. New
York: Springer; 978-1-4419-0426-3 hardback 3780 [pounds sterling].
Panegyrists of imperial Rome were often at a loss as to how to
communicate the magnitude and dazzling diversity of the ancient
metropolis. One strategy was to resort to statistics: the numbers of
temples and statues, the cumulative length of porticoes, the size and
mix of its population and so on. The scale of Springer's
Encyclopedia of global archaeology invites a similar strategy: 5 years
in the making, 11 volumes, 8015 pages, 1625 entries by an international
cast of 1356 authors under the guidance of 65 section editors and a
29-member advisory board, plus more than 11 000 cross-references. The
names and affiliations of the contributors take up 70-odd pages of front
matter alone. It is tempting to weigh it (this would definitely involve
bringing the bathroom scales to the office and not taking all 11
hardback volumes home). Indeed, the Encyclopedia defies easy
quantification--the online eReference version has hundreds of additional
entries and is intended to expand over time. An alternative measure is
price. At 3780 [pounds sterling] for the print version, or 4725 [pounds
sterling] for combined print and eReference, one could certainly buy a
decent second-hand car for the equivalent value. So, what do these
volumes offer? And for whom are they intended?
First, some organisational matters. The Encyclopedia is organised
alphabetically, from 'Abu Hureyra: Agriculture and
Domestication' through to 'Zvelebil, Marek'. Volume 1
provides an extended 'Topical table of contents', with entries
grouped under themes such as 'Archaeology in the modern
world', 'Ethics', 'Indigenous archaeology',
'Theory' and 'Extreme environments'.
Entries range in length from a single page (such as 'Hedges in
Historical Archaeology') to 15 or more (such as 'Hunting and
Hunting Landscapes'). Some topics are afforded multiple entries,
both to reflect divergent (and especially regional) perspectives and, we
are told, to promote the didactic value of the Encyclopedia by opening
up debate; examples include 'Binford, Lewis R. (Hunter-Gatherer and
Mid-Range Societies)' followed by 'Binford, Lewis R.
(Theory)'. Some generic thematic entries e.g. 'Bioarchaeology,
Human Osteology, and Forensic Anthropology: Definitions and
Developments' are followed by additional, specific case studies--in
this instance, 'Bioarchaeology in the Roman Empire'-- but
there is no explanation for the choice of these illustrative examples or
the exclusion of others. Similarly, 'Phytolith Studies in
Archaeology' is followed by 'Phytoliths of Islamic
Archaeology', but no other periods or places are afforded such
attention.
Each entry is structured as a series of standard sections, although
individual contributors have sometimes had to find ways to adapt these
to their particular topics: Introduction, Definition, Historical
Background, Key Issues, Current Debates, International Perspectives (in
the spirit of the Encyclopedia's global remit, although it is not
always easy to demonstrate, depending on the subject) and Future
Directions. Entries are well illustrated with colour photographs,
diagrams, plans, graphs and tables, and each is concluded with
cross-references and generous, up-to-date bibliographies divided into
text references and further reading.
The Encyclopedia is in English throughout, but has made efforts to
reach beyond the Anglophone world. One of the defining characteristics
of this undertaking is the number of entries translated from other
languages: French, Italian, Portuguese and Spanish, and many more were
submitted by authors in languages other than their native tongue:
German, Chinese and Japanese. Smith observes that the invitation to
submit in languages other than English "accessed a torrent of
hitherto untapped expertise" (p. viii). The involvement of more
than the usual English-language cohort of contributors definitely gives
this encyclopedia a special character and strengthens its international
credentials. It is an achievement to which the editor very properly
draws attention in her Acknowledgements (p. xii): financial support for
translation "has allowed the encyclopedia to contribute to the
democratization of archaeology globally. By accessing the work of the
finest scholars, no matter what language they write in, we have replaced
English-language networks with international networks and produced an
encyclopedia that is truly global in scope."
Another feature is the inclusion of biographies of key
archaeologists, although, curiously, a number of the biographies appear
zzzzfobiographical. Indeed, this emphasises the fact that some of the
biographical entries cover not only revered historical figures but
archaeologists, older and younger, who are still alive. Thus, Robert
Bednarik and George Abungu appear alongside James Mellaart, Arthur Evans
and Victor Sarianidi. It is sometimes said that a scholar's true
contribution to a subject cannot reliably be assessed without the
benefit of hindsight, and the inclusion of the living is an interesting
and perhaps courageous policy.
This great mass of collective scholarship combines into a
monumental whole. Some of the entries are arguably already served in
greater detail elsewhere in various other encyclopedias, handbooks and
companions of narrower scope (see the March 2014 New Book Chronicle in
Antiquity 88: 334-46). Nonetheless, it is easy to imagine recommending
students to begin their research on almost any topic by consulting the
entries in these volumes. As a starting point for research, the
Encyclopedia--and especially its eReference version--would be a very
welcome resource for any archaeology student. More broadly, as a
snapshot of the discipline, it is unparalleled.
Scope and structure
There are numerous dimensions of difference that could be used to
assess the coverage provided by the Encyclopedia. It is particularly
strong on cultural relevance and issues of contemporary concern such as
ethics and repatriation: perhaps not surprising, given the editor's
recent prominence as President of the World Archaeological Congress for
two consecutive terms. It is refreshing to see the greater emphasis on
people and places outside Europe and North America in terms of both
entries and authors.
The topics covered by the Encyclopedia's entries range in
geographical scale from individual sites, through regional cultures to
global, thematic phenomena. There is a strong emphasis on cultural
heritage and museums, sometimes individual monuments or institutions,
often on a country-by-country basis, emphasising issues of management,
legislation and education. A Noah's ark of animals and their
domestication and use are covered--from alpacas to yaks--as is an
impressive range of plants, from apricots to yams. There are also
entries on all manner of theories and field and laboratory methods. Many
of the authors are leading figures in their topics; for example, Marilyn
Palmer on 'Industrial Archaeology', Randall McGuire on
'Capitalism in Archaeological Theory', Dorian Fuller on
'Rice, Origins and Development', Ingrid Edlund-Berry on
'Central Italy: Etruscan-Italic Sanctuaries', Elmo Le6n on
'Andes: Prehistoric Period' and Gian Pietro Brogiolo on
'Italy: Medieval Archaeology'.
The coverage has been constructed around a number of key themes.
Leaving aside the 'Additional Biographical Entries', there are
29 themes, some of them focused on periods and places, others on
approaches and techniques, and still others on everyday issues of
politics, law and education. There is some unevenness in the size and
breadth of the themes: thus 'World Heritage' (100 entries) and
'Historical Archaeology' (150 entries) rub shoulders with
'Near East (Ancient, Pre-Achaemenid)', (8 entries) and
'Islamic Archaeology' (17 entries). Some of these smaller
themes might perhaps have been combined into larger blocks. Our pie
chart illustrates the overall configuration of the contents. The
category divisions are somewhat arbitrary, and many individual entries
might in reality have been classified under a series of alternative
categories, but it is a striking feature of the times that
'Theory' (76 entries) represents such a thin offering compared
with most of the others. Is this a way of telling us that in global
perspective, theory is mainly a concern of North American and North
European archaeologists?
Yet even an 8000-page encyclopedia cannot claim to cover
everything, and one of the fascinations
of dipping into a collection such as this is to see the way in
which the materials have been chosen and assembled. A certain
arbitrariness is inevitable in a work of this kind. Among the
biographical entries, for instance, many expected names are missing: no
Francois Bordes, for example, or David Clarke; no Richard MacNeish, or
Glyn Daniel, or Chris Tilley, or Willard Libby (arguably not an
archaeologist?). Conversely, Mike Schiffer (like Lewis Binford) receives
two entries (under the categories Archaeology of the Modern World'
and 'Theory'). Among older historical figures, John Lubbock
gets an entry, as do Karl Marx and Charles Darwin, but not Lewis Henry
Morgan or Edward Tylor.
[GRAPHIC OMITTED]
Even within the individual categories there is considerable
flexibility in the way the material has been presented: Agriculture and
Domestication (92 entries), for example, concentrates mainly on
individual species (51 examples) but also key sites (14 entries) and two
regional studies (Papua New Guinea and Eastern USA), with the remaining
entries a mixture of overviews and techniques.
That flexibility extends to the way in which individual entries
themselves are written and conceived. To take just a single example, the
article on 'Linearbandkeramik Site Excavation' (by Daniela
Hofmann) explains the limitations and challenges of excavating these
large Early Neolithic (c. 5600-4900 cal BC) settlements, focusing mainly
on the Aldenhoven Plateau excavations of the 1970s and 1980s. There is
no mention of earlier work such as that of Modderman in Dutch Limburg or
Soudsky at Bylany in the Czech Republic. Instead, we have a lively
mixture of observations on the interpretational challenges and the way
newer excavations are getting to grips with these. The slightly
idiosyncratic nature of the approaches taken in these articles--also
reflected in their titles (one might wonder why this is about
Linearbandkeramik site excavation, rather than simply the
Linearbandkeramik, or Linearbandkeramik settlements)--also makes them
more lively and engaging, with freedom for authors to develop specific
angles and concerns. It is a strength, rather than a weakness, of this
fascinating series of volumes.
Inclusions and exclusions
The Encyclopedia aims to encompass "all time periods and
regions of the world and all stages of human development" (p. vii);
in that, it shares an objective with Antiquity. But, of course, journals
have the luxury of working incrementally and perpetually toward that
goal; encyclopedias, or at least print encyclopedias, must deliver a
more definitive product, and sooner. Unsurprisingly, the Encyclopedia
claims "comprehensive and systematic coverage of archaeology that
is unprecedented" (p. vii).
Reviewers are sometimes prone to review the book they wished it to
have been rather than the book it actually is. As most authors are
careful to delimit their scope, such an approach to reviewing is bad
form. However, an encyclopedia claiming to be comprehensive--indeed,
"a definitive reference work" (p. vii)--positively invites the
reviewer to search for what's missing. Simultaneously, Smith
clearly recognises in her Acknowledgements, that "it's not
possible to have an entry on every possible subject" (p. xi).
Further, we receive a clue--and no more--as to the inevitably uneven
nature of coverage when Smith comments in relation to biographical
entries that, as a result of very different regional histories of
archaeology, there are comparatively few biographies of African
archaeologists, most of the selected Portuguese individuals are still
alive, but the Japanese ones are not. This insight is one of the very
few editorial examples with which we are provided. Most striking is the
absence of any comment about how the editorial team set about their task
of defining the topics, finding contributors and shaping the entries.
The definition of criteria for inclusion or exclusion in ambitious,
multi-authored volumes of global scope is similarly raised by the new
Cambridge world prehistory (Renfrew & Bahn 2014). In that case, the
editors provide explicit discussion about the meaning of 'world
prehistory' and their approach to drawing a line between prehistory
and later historical periods (pp. 5-6). As they note, there is no easy
solution, as even the apparently simple criterion of the absence of
written history is highly difficult to implement across time and space.
Pragmatism is of the essence.
In the absence of much explicit guidance, should global archaeology
be taken simply as 'everything', a mosaic which can be added
to indefinitely but never completed? (Indeed, in a literal sense,
"all time periods and regions of the world and all stages of human
development" (p. vii) doesn't even rule out lunar
archaeology.) Or should we look for some qualitative parameters that
limit its scope and define its subject matter? Or is it a random
assortment that aims only to capture something broadly representative?
There must have been some guiding principles; for example, in the
appointment of the regional editors. How were they identified and what
guidelines, or leeway, were they given? Or, to use more concrete
examples, why is there is an entry for the Berlin Wall, but not
Hadrian's Wall? Why does Berenike receive a long entry, but Myos
Hormos doesn't get anything? How do these decisions relate
specifically to 'globalness'?
Perhaps the criteria are inherent in the term 'global
archaeology'? To find out, we turn to the entry on that subject,
authored by Pedro Funari and Aline Carvalho. Here, global archaeology is
defined in relation to "three great ruptures" (p. 3052) that
have redefined the discipline, starting in the mid-twentieth century: a
redefinition of the concept of culture, particularly resulting from the
experiences leading to, during and resulting from the Second World War;
attitudes towards the environment; and the end of the Cold War and the
consolidation of capitalism. Whereas earlier attempts at
all-encompassing narratives of the human past were effectively
extensions of Western colonial domination, more recent research has
shifted to "a chaotic, but pluralist, study of past material
culture, from a variety of conflicting standpoints" (p. 3053). In
the context of the globalised present, this raises epistemological
challenges, such as how to acknowledge the local and the particular
without imposing or losing sight of the bigger picture. Notwithstanding
the aims and achievements of global archaeology in the promotion of
"diversity, freedom, and the empowerment of people" (p. 3058),
and the great rise in the number of non-Western archaeologists, there
are also acknowledged tensions including the continued influence of
North American and Western European scholarship.
As Funari and Carvalho observe, central to many of these
developments has been the World Archaeological Congress (WAC), and it is
no coincidence that Encyclopedia's editor was also the President of
WAC from 2003 to 2014. Although not explicitly discussed by Smith, the
founding ideals of WAC clearly inform both the core concept of the
Encyclopedia and the pragmatic selection of its many entries. It
presents a global consciousness not simply of the need to study the past
in a different way but for social and political action to challenge and
change the status quo. That may explain why Hadrian's Wall
doesn't make the final cut (despite its incorporation into the
Frontiers of the Roman Empire transnational World Heritage Site on the
grounds of Outstanding Universal Value. Nonetheless, there are still
plenty of entries on Classical and Roman themes--indeed, perhaps rather
more than might have been expected).
By complete chance--or, then again, perhaps in a publication of
such size it is statistically inevitable--one of the entries makes the
very same point. In her entry for 'Centuriation and Roman Land
Surveying', Marinella Pasquinucci evaluates a set of Roman
surveying manuals assembled during Late Antiquity and known as the
Corpus Agrimensores Romanorum. She concludes that "the writings
manifest a relevant diversity of interests and approaches [but] we
cannot identify the criteria applied in making the compilation [... ] On
the whole, they were presumably produced with didactic aims" (p.
1287). Like the writings of the Roman land surveyors, the Encyclopedia
is a valuable document even if we don't fully understand the
rationale behind it.
Virtual futures
A feature of this project is the parallel eReference version of the
Encyclopedia (although we have only consulted the print version for the
purposes of this review). Many publications now have print and digital
editions. The plan here, however, is for the eReference version to be
both expanded and constantly updated, so that "this reference work
will be as useful in twenty years as it is in two years" (p. vii),
although it is not made clear in the print version how this updating
will be organised or by whom. This virtual future, evolving away from
its static print twin, raises interesting questions. What is the value
of a print encyclopedia that, it is acknowledged, will quickly date? The
Encyclopaedia Britannica has long abandoned hard copy. One answer is
that the print version provides a snapshot of the discipline in 2014;
its dynamic virtual twin may reflect the state-of-the-art in 2034, but
the print copy will be a record of what preoccupied us (or not) today.
And the print copy is certainly close to Smith's childhood
inspiration, recounted in the Preface, in the form of family discussions
of regular encyclopedic instalments. Browsing through these volumes, it
is not hard to find a fascinating entry to read--and something even more
fascinating, but completely different, in the next entry. The joy of the
print version is precisely the serendipity of finding an entry on
'Childe, Vere Gordon (Political and Social Archaeology)' next
to 'Chickpea: Origins and Development'. It is the random
juxtaposition of the encyclopedia format that makes browsing these
volumes compelling and quite the opposite of the mechanical process of
'discoverability', to use the soulless terminology of
information science.
Nonetheless, searching for specific information in the print
version is not particularly easy and clearly the search function of the
eReference version, and its ability to scan the full text as well as the
entry titles, is much more suited to targeted research. As so often, the
digital doesn't quite replace the analogue, but simply highlights
the different strengths of the two media formats. Horses for courses.
Yet there is a bigger question lurking here. All the benefits of
print aside, could this venture have been tackled solely in a digital
format? We are told that "people should use this encyclopedia as a
first stop for obtaining information on a topic" (p. xi). That
sounds very similar to the way in which people use Wikipedia. Indeed,
are the ambitions of the Encyclopedia and Wikipedia so different:
collaborative, cosmopolitan, global, dialogic, constantly expanding?
Many of these entries already have Wikipedia pages, some longer and more
detailed than those in the Encyclopedia and enriched with other
benefits, such as hyperlinks to dynamic maps and satellite images. We
would certainly not wish to suggest that the Encyclopedia and Wikipedia
are comparable in content, but what, in principle, does the Encyclopedia
(and especially its eReference version) do that Wikipedia cannot?
Clearly the authority of the contributors is crucial, but we also return
to the question of scope and the rationale for what is included and what
is excluded. It is precisely the editorial vision and direction that
Wikipedia lacks, and hence why it would have been helpful to know more
about the editor's process.
This is an impressive compilation, the latest and largest in a
series of encyclopedias that have appeared over the last 15 years. That
sequence began with the Companion encyclopedia of archaeology (edited by
Graeme Barker) in 1999: 1219 pages in 2 volumes. Next came Deborah M.
Pearsall's Encyclopedia of archaeology in 2007: 2532 pages in 3
volumes. And now we have the Encyclopedia of global archaeology, at over
three times the length and number of volumes. So where next for works of
this kind? Does the Encyclopedia of global archaeology represent the
last and largest of its kind, in a world of reference rapidly moving
towards the digital age of fluid boundaries? Is it more appropriate,
perhaps, to compare it not with previous 'encyclopedias' but
with the ever-growing list of Oxford Handbooks and similar series of
reference works? Is it there that the future lies? Will the Encyclopedia
prove the last attempt to cover archaeology in its entirety on such a
scale?
We conclude by returning to where we began: ancient Rome. The
city's panegyrists described it as a cosmopolis, a place where the
full diversity of the known world--its peoples, ideas, animals, plants
and things of every kind--could be experienced in a single place. Such
is the Encyclopedia of global archaeology.
doi: 10.15184/aqy.2014.27
References
BARKER, G. (ed.). 1999. Companion encyclopedia of archaeology. 2
volumes. London & New York: Routledge.
PEARSALL, D.M. (ed.). 2007. Encyclopedia of archaeology. 3 volumes.
New York: Elsevier & Academic.
RENFREW, C. & P.G. BAHN (ed.). 2014. The Cambridge world
prehistory. 3 volumes. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.