New book chronicle.
Lilley, Ian ; Heckenberger, Michael ; Krigbaum, John 等
COLIN RENFREW & PAUL BAHN (ed.). The Cambridge world
prehistory. 3 volumes, xxxii+2049 pages, numerous b&w illustrations.
2014. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 978-0-521-11993-1 hardback
450 [pounds sterling] & $675.
In the first issue of 2015 we devoted the whole of the NBC to a
single publication, Springer's massive Encyclopedia of global
archaeology, edited by Claire Smith. The appearance of another
blockbusting set of volumes of global remit, authored by a cast of
prominent scholars, demands similar attention. The three-volume
Cambridge world prehistory, however, adopts a rather different format to
the Encyclopedia and this has encouraged us to seek some specialist
insight. This issue's NBC therefore takes the form of three
parallel reviews--one dedicated to each regional volume--by reviewers
invited on the basis of their regional expertise.
Volume 1: Africa, South and Southeast Asia, and the Pacific
Ian Lilley
ATSIS Unit, University of Queensland, Australia (Email:
i.lilley@uq.edu.au)
Although not called an encyclopaedia, the three volumes of The
Cambridge world prehistory certainly comprise an encyclopaedic venture.
The jacket notes state that the editors, Colin Renfrew and Paul Bahn,
aim to deliver "a systematic and authoritative examination of the
prehistory of every region around the world", and the tables of
contents show they have not cut any corners. In Volume 1, the subject of
this first review, we thus find concise but geographically and
chronologically exhaustive treatments of Africa (North and Sub-Saharan),
southern Asia including Island Southeast Asia, and the Pacific, covering
continental Australia as well as the Pacific Islands. Innovatively for a
project such as this, regular chapters on linguistics
('Languages') and genetics ('DNA') complement the
otherwise predominantly archaeological and palaeoanthropological
emphasis.
The contributions are gathered into four sections:
'Introduction', 'Africa', 'South and Southeast
Asia' and 'The Pacific'. The first section includes a
generic introduction to the entire enterprise, as well as justification
for the inclusion of DNA and linguistics. In addition to the usual
background information that opens broad synthetic works, the general
introduction also explains another interesting dimension of the project:
although it is concerned with prehistory--that is, the history of pre-
or non-literate societies--the editors have commissioned summary
accounts of key early literate societies to round off the narratives
concerning earlier periods. Thus in the present volume we find short
summaries covering Pharaonic history, Classical and post-Classical
Africa, historic India and historic Mainland Southeast Asia. Prehistory
ended in the Pacific with the arrival of literate modern Europeans, so
there is no such wrap-up for that region.
The inclusion of DNA and linguistics--'molecular
genetics' and 'archaeolinguistics' in the jacket
blurb--is heralded as cutting edge. The introduction to the study of
ancient DNA is short and sweet, at just five pages of text. Conversely,
the introduction to linguistics gets 24 pages of text; it is co-authored
by co-editor Renfrew, and the more lengthy treatment reflects his
well-developed interest in the topic. The two fields of enquiry are not
joined in any synthesis but remain separate, each with its own set of
possibilities and problems in relation to the regional archaeology under
consideration. More on this shortly.
Part II, the Africa section, begins in the Late Miocene about six
million years ago, following the split of humans and chimpanzees from a
common ancestor. We get a quick but comprehensive tour of the biology of
"all fossil human ancestor species except those belonging to the
genus Homo" (p. 47), followed by an equally concise run-down of the
"stone artifacts [that] represent the dawn of human material
culture" (p. 65).
The scene is then set for the rest of the volume--indeed, for all
three volumes--with a short, sharp chapter: 'The Human
Revolution'. This discusses genetic evidence for the 'Out of
Africa' model of modern human origins, as well as related questions
arising in the genetics of Africa (modern and prehistoric), including
matters overlapping with linguistics, such as the origins of human
language and the genetics of click' language speakers and of the
spread of Bantu languages across most of southern Africa.
The remainder of Part II follows the course of human history in
Africa through to post-Classical times. It starts with a survey of the
physical remains of the genus Homo up to and including anatomically
modern humans (AMH). It then works its way through the Sub-Saharan
Middle Stone Age, Later Stone Age of southern Africa, North Africa after
the Middle Palaeolithic, Holocene West Africa, the archaeology of the
Central African rainforest, the later prehistory of southern Africa, the
prehistory of East Africa, Egypt in three chapters from the Neolithic to
the Pharaohs, and a summary of the Classical and post-Classical periods,
including the expansion of Islam (and Arabic), right up to the
nineteenth-century European 'scramble for Africa'. Part II
concludes with an overview of African languages.
Parts III and IV, 'South and Southeast Asia' and
'The Pacific' respectively, adopt the same basic structure as
Part II. They start with the earliest evidence and work through to the
end of prehistory, each with their own chapters on DNA and languages.
Part III opens with chapters on the Palaeolithic of South and Southeast
Asia and then the DNA chapter. The section then outlines the Upper
Palaeolithic of both regions together before concentrating on South Asia
and considering post-Pleistocene (post-Ice Age) food production in South
Asia, the Indus Valley civilisation, India beyond the Indus civilisation
and finally historic India. The focus next moves to Southeast Asia to
examine early food production, mainland complex societies, the mainland
in early historic times, Indonesian and, separately, Philippines
prehistory, and then the linguistic overview.
At 129 pages, Part IV is only half the length of the other two
regional treatments in the volume. Sandwiched between the DNA and
languages chapters we find the Pleistocene in Australia, New Guinea and
nearby archipelagos (by their archaeological names of Sahul and Near
Oceania), separate chapters on post-ice Age New Guinea and Australia,
and the Island Pacific regions of Micronesia, Melanesia and Polynesia,
and last but not least (despite being part of Polynesia), New Zealand.
Volume 1 alone is a prodigious undertaking. How well does it work?
That depends. It is framed in the jacket notes as a "resource for
any student or scholar of archaeology". It does, however, assume
not a little general archaeological knowledge on the reader's part;
junior students (taking a narrow definition of 'student') may
need to reach for Renfrew and Bahn's (2012) well-known
undergraduate textbook.
Extending students in this way is no bad thing, but I am unsure how
useful the volume will be for anyone more advanced in their career. This
is because--as is inevitable with these sorts of exercises--it is,
except in broad terms, already out of date and the treatments are mostly
too concise to replace the original papers that most scholars will still
need to consult. Being out of date is a risk all researchers face but is
more of problem for projects such as this, which claim more substantial
and permanent authority than less ambitious books and certainly most
journal articles. Moreover, in paring down vast bodies of original
research, a great deal of detail and nuance is unavoidably lost,
scholarly bias can override even-handedness in the succinct
characterisation--even the mention--of controversies and basic errors
can be introduced. As a major 'reference work', edited for a
prestigious publisher by two prominent scholars, such errors, biases and
over-simplifications can easily become scholarly 'truths', at
least for non-specialist users.
That said, the Pacific section, where my own expertise lies, is a
pretty good run-down on the basics (notwithstanding the omission of such
up-to-the-minute discoveries as Polynesian chickens in the pre-Columbian
Americas and Lapita ceramics on the south coast of New Guinea). The
authors' various blind spots and predilections are well known to
me, and I cannot see any glaring errors or omissions or significantly
biased portrayals. Debates of intense interest to the cognoscenti, but
probably of little or no interest to anyone else--such as the
ins-and-outs of the Lapita dispersal or the nature and origins of mid-
to Late Holocene change in Australia--are dealt with appropriately. If
the other regional sections are like this--and from a
non-specialist's perspective they certainly seem to be--then the
volume succeeds admirably as a quick reference guide, but one that needs
to be checked against the specialist literature for anything more than a
general overview.
In this context, the DNA and languages chapters are a mixed
blessing. That they are included at all is excellent, but they are too
specialised in content and writing style--the languages chapters in
particular--to add as much as they might for non-specialists. As a
Pacific archaeologist, I am used to reading the details of both
biological and linguistic research because unlike many other parts of
the world we have long worked routinely across all three data sets. Yet
I found the other language chapters heavy going for the most part.
Another issue is that the volume is not nearly as well integrated
as it could and should be. I understand that the editors think it
premature to synthesise the archaeology, linguistics and genetics in a
unified narrative. They--or their Cambridge University Press
collaborators--could, however, have done much more cross-referencing
both within and between the four main sections. References to processes
and events discussed in two or more contributions seem random for the
most part, and key dates or interpretations of important matters often
vary substantially without even passing acknowledgement that other
contributors might have different ideas, or might have something
complementary to add.
One important example is the date of the 'African exodus'
of AMH and the implications of that date for their appearance in
southern Asia and to the initial colonisation of Sahul (Australia,
Tasmania and New Guinea joined by lowered Ice Age sea levels). If AMH
left Africa only 50 000-60 000 years ago, as stated in several places,
how did they get to Australia by the same date, as stated in several
other places? Matters concerning early Musa bananas (which are Southeast
Asian) in West Africa, the settlement of Madagascar and the emergence of
food production in Southeast Asia and the New Guinea highlands should
all have been cross-referenced.
If the archaeological treatment is generally very good, there are
some errors of fact, mostly connected with geography; these sometimes
really do make a difference. For example, on page 563, the distance from
Papua New Guinea to the Admiralty Islands is stated as around
60km--instead of 200km--although this lower figure might refer to that
part of the journey that is out of sight of land (but this is actually
more like 75km). A Pleistocene ocean voyage of 200km would be something
extraordinary, the more so that a substantial part of it would have been
'blind'. Another geographical error can be found on page 623,
where Buka is placed west of Nissan instead of east, incorrectly
locating it in the Bismarck Archipelago rather than the Solomon Islands.
This means that, contrary to the portrayal in that chapter, there are
Pleistocene rather than only late Holocene sites in the Solomon Islands.
That has major implications for our understanding of the settlement of
Oceania, and it is why the Solomons are included in Near Oceania, rather
than remote Oceania, which was uninhabited before Lapita times.
A "systematic and authoritative examination of the prehistory
of every region around the world", especially when supplemented
with chapters on DNA and languages, should be a library acquisition of
enduring value. It is, however, by its nature already out of date and
will only become even more so. A second edition would allow errors to be
eliminated, cross-references improved and inconsistencies explained. An
electronic edition, however, would allow the authors to incorporate
up-to-the-minute material through regular--say, annual--updates, as well
as to make use of colour illustrations.
Volume 2: East Asia and the Americas
Michael Heckenberger & John Krigbaum
Department of Anthropology, University of Florida, USA (Email:
mheck@ufl.edu; krigbaum@ufl.edu)
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
For Volume 2 of this ambitious enterprise, Renfrew and Bahn have
assembled an A' team of regional experts, allowing them scope to
shape their chapters according to their areas of specialisation. The
authors provide up-to-date coverage of the Lower to Middle Palaeolithic
(East Asia) and Upper Palaeolithic (north-east Asia) and four chapters
on Palaeoindian and Archaic in North, Central and South America; three
chapters on the Neolithic in Asia and three on the Formative in the
Americas; two chapters on early complex societies and early urban states
in northern and southern China and six on the Americas; and two chapters
on full-blown empires. In addition to these traditional areas of world
prehistory research, the volume also includes chapters on less
well-known topics, including Holocene societies of Korea and Japan, the
Russian Far East, five chapters on North America, one on the Caribbean
and three on South America, including the southern Andes, northern Andes
and Amazonia.
In scope and depth, it is an unparalleled overview of the
prehistory of East Asia and the Americas. It is a must read for anyone
interested in overviews of these regions, raising the bar over previous
encyclopaedic treatments. It falls short, however, as a synthetic work.
First, the scope of the volume presents some difficulties: East Asia and
the Americas are strange bedfellows, and it is hard to envision a
scholarly group focusing on Amer-asian prehistory. Second, nowhere is
the question of relevance addressed head on. What should the archaeology
of the future look like? Should archaeologists not take a more
pro-active stance as primary architects of how the past is
reconstructed, contributing to contemporary discourses such as climate
change, sustainability and human rights?
Volume 2 includes brief summaries on human DNA research (modern and
ancient) at the start of each regional section and much more in-depth
reviews of historical linguistic research at the close of each section.
The DNA chapters, co-authored by Forster and Renfrew, lack detail and
integration. They omit, for example, key publications such as those
dealing with the updated three-stage colonisation model for the peopling
of North America. This is understandable to a point, but it flies in the
face of new work that builds upon the earlier global perspectives of
Cavalli-Sforza and colleagues with respect to genes, dines and
population histories published two decades ago. There are also missteps
that underscore these trends. For example, Homo erectus pekinensis is
not only 'old school' taxonomy with respect to Pleistocene
hominins, but this erroneous subspecies is misspelled in the text.
Another example is that for early modern humans, most authors today
adopt anatomically modern humans' (AMH) to distinguish them from
'later' modern humans, but here early modern humans (EMH) is
used instead.
The authoritative chapters on language provide overviews of a vast
amount of scholarship from East Asia and the Americas, noting the great
linguistic diversity in both areas. These follow traditional approaches
to historical linguistics, but they might have also included oral
history, prosody and semantics, and body language--speech and
gesture--in other words, parole. As the inclusion of these summaries
suggests, both genetics and languages are critical for understanding,
but there is little linkage to these themes by the authors of the
regional chapters.
Where is climate, and human-natural systems, in all of this? Some
archaeologists, including some of the authors in this work, are
self-proclaimed climate-determinists. Indeed, many of the individual
chapters and cultural histories seem imbued with environmental
determinism. Post-Pleistocene adaptations to climate change, although
mentioned, are not explored, even though this is one of the premiere
issues of the day. Surely, climate is critical for change in
agricultural societies and the expansion of farming peoples?
The book expands on Renfrew's long interest in relations
between material culture, language and genetics, notably his work on
Indo-European languages and the language-farming hypothesis. The
traditional view of agriculture, based on human-plant interactions, is
maintained: seed crops, full domestication and intensification. More
attention, however, might have been paid to other plants, some quite
resistant to change, within domesticated landscapes. The nearly 100
native plants at some stage of domestication recognised in Amazonia--an
environment where almost every little cutting grows up again with very
little help--explodes the focus on a few key species and population
domestication. Similarly, for animals: is a sea cow livestock? Perhaps
so when it, like turtles, was kept in pens of thousands.
East Asia and the Americas do not fit the civilising impulse, as it
has been defined elsewhere. They do not work quite as planned, which, in
turn, makes us wonder how well they work elsewhere. In part, this is due
to the state of knowledge. We know much more about the eastern woodlands
of North America than the Amazon, but to omit the latter would be
egregious: it is hard to work there, yes, but more critical has been the
overarching assumption that little happened there. Compendiums such as
this one still seem to force debate down well-known alleys, some of
which seem like dead-ends in terms of identifying alternative histories.
Writing the histories of people without history is a violent act.
For the current volume, East Asia and the Americas, one might have at
least emphasised the history of ideas and called out the fact that
prehistory is imbued with certain biases. Indeed, the very notion of
prehistory is particularly painful as an organising principle in this
volume: the Farthest East, the other side of the Occident--these most
exotic of places to Westerners. This may seem unimportant, but for many
it is central. It was the same logic that convinced Marx that imperial
China, and the Asiatic mode of production, was to be stratified beneath
Greece and Rome, an idea long ago disabused by K.C. Chang (1989). Yet,
here again, European terms (Neolithic, Early and Upper Palaeolithic, the
Bronze and Iron Ages) are used unapologetically as global concepts, at
least with respect to the East Asian archaeological record, with slight
modifications in the Americas, changing Palaeolithic to Palaeo-Indian,
Mesolithic to Archaic, and Neolithic to Formative. As usual, we have
iron and stone over bamboo and textiles, economic intensification over
astronomy and so on.
Throughout the volume, the traditional approaches of cultural
history and explanatory models are amply expressed, but what about
history, alternative ways of knowing, or questions of agency, gender and
power, or the idea of prehistory itself, deeply imbued with cultural
evolutionist assumptions and a lingering Orientalism? It almost seems
that the authors, including many contributors who represent the
conceptual vanguard of each area, were instructed not to delve too
deeply into theory. No tilting at windmills here. Keep to the facts,
with little discussion of alternatives, schisms, factionalism or
witch-hunts. Is this not what Levi-Strauss (1961) called the
"cannibalizing instincts of the historical process"? It robs
alternative histories of their power to unsettle hidden biases in how we
interpret the archaeological, as well as their potential incendiary
effect (Latour 2009), which seems particularly significant given the
popularity of Eurocentric renderings of prehistoric(like) people in the
modern world, people presumably without history (e.g. Diamond 2012;
Chagnon 2013).
How far have we moved beyond savages, barbarians and civilisation,
the three ages, and revolutions? Writing and history rise alongside
cities, science and technology, but as one Native American leader once
observed to us: "one of these days you guys will wake up, 90% of
the world isn't White." It is worth remembering the living
descendants, who are also engaged with the past. Using the term
prehistory does not let anybody off the hook. In one way or another, we
all work with living traditions, each recreating the past differently.
Where are these debates, the ideas and discoveries that bring life to
archaeology, genes and languages--both among archaeologists and out
there in the 'real world'?
Such an approach does not require the adoption of a radical
post-modern stance, but it does require some attention to agency and
voice, and the critical question of who owns the past and to what ends.
Nor is it a criticism of any of the chapters in this volume, which are
well ordered, well written and up-to-date. The volume and its companions
are marvellous compendiums of archaeological facts. Indeed, it is
pointless to fault it for what it is; the definitive chronicle of human
beings before AD 1500. This is not even a critique of the editors,
necessarily, as this is a library run, and as such well worth the paper.
But, it would be an omission of any critique (or meta-critique, if you
will) that fails to point out that the project is missing something
important: heart and soul! Where should we be going with all of this?
What are the disagreements? Where are the great battles, the crises, of
our time? Even some of the seasoned pugilists who grace these pages
appear mute on what might be most important to many readers: why is
archaeology important and for whom? Archaeology does matter, but here
the flood of detail is often poorly synthesised vis a vis the larger
project of world prehistory.
This is no doubt the high water mark of global compendiums
and--dare we say--may be the last, as electronic sharing of material
becomes the norm. Yet even though it is a magisterial treatment, who
will use it? This is a book written by archaeologists for
archaeologists. At the very least it calls out for a companion volume:
prehistory and beyond, critical world prehistory or archaeologies of the
future. Nonetheless, we cannot imagine any major library that should not
have a copy of these volumes as the best global overview to date.
Volume 3: West and Central Asia, and Europe
Barry Cunliffe
Institute of Archaeology, University of Oxford, UK (Email:
barry.cunliffe@arch.ox.ac.uk)
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Volume 3 spans what are surely the two richest archaeological
regions in the world: Western and Central Asia, and Europe and the
Mediterranean. It does so in 29 chapters, some covering broad themes,
others defined by period or divided by region. The individual authors
have been chosen for their expertise and personal involvement in their
subject area, and have evidently been given a degree of freedom to
fulfil their brief. Some have written quite short pieces of about 6000
words, others have been more expansive, taking twice the length. The
result is a lively variety of approaches reflecting the preferences and
personalities of their authors. Contrast, for example, Chapman writing
on 'Early Food production in Southeastern Europe' with Molodin
and Polos'mak's treatment of 'Southern Siberia during the
Bronze and Early Iron Periods'. Chapman chooses to focus tightly on
the process of forager/farmer interaction in a short but stimulating
discussion, while Molodin & Polos'mak take a more expansive
view of their brief, offering first an account of the history of
Siberian archaeology followed by detailed descriptions of the numerous
cultural groups occupying the region from the fifth to first millennium
BC; this chapter is invaluable in making available material published
almost exclusively in Russian to western readers.
These two chapters are, perhaps, extremes. Most authors have chosen
to combine a discussion of material culture with explanatory models,
usually opting for a narrative (i.e. chronological) presentation. Some,
however, are more adventurous. Zilhao, for example, facing the task of
summarising the Upper Palaeolithic of Europe, takes a more thematic
approach, dealing first with the concept of the Upper Palaeolithic and
then exploring settlement, subsistence, intensification, demography and
innovation, before moving on to social geography and culture. This is an
inspiring and thought-provoking contribution that immediately opens up
the excitement and intellectual challenge of the subject.
In constructing the volume the editors have had to grapple with the
problem of what constitutes prehistory--a difficult task when dealing
with the Old World. They seem to have leaned more to the French view,
which separates the ancient world into prehistoire and prohistorie with
the divide around the beginning of the Bronze Age, and they have
concentrated on prehistoire. This could be justified by arguing that
prehistoire covers a much longer time span than prohistorie, but the
result is that rich and complex later periods such as Europe in the
second and first millennium BC have had to be dealt with rather
breathlessly in a way that does scant justice to the quality of the data
and the historical significance of the period. To complete the
historical overview there are two short essays: 'Western Asia after
Alexander' by Herrmann and 'The Classical World' by
Snodgrass--unenviable tasks perhaps, but challenges evidently relished
by the authors. Herrmann takes us thematically through the rich
potential of the Parthian and Sasanian Empires, while Snodgrass reflects
on Greeks, Romans and Byzantines with the assurance of the master,
drawing out wise and unexpected observations to delight us. These
entertaining essays bring the regional narratives to neat conclusions.
Although both of the main sections--Western and Central Asia, and
Europe and the Mediterranean--are treated regionally and
chronologically, each is given coherence by overarching essays on
'DNA' (Forster and Renfrew) and 'Languages'
(Heggarty and Renfrew). These are most welcome, not least because they
relieve the other authors of having to deal piecemeal with these complex
issues. The two essays on DNA are fairly brief. They carry a warning
that we are at the beginning of such studies when data are still sparse
and barely susceptible to statistical testing. Care is needed so as not
to hasten to unjustifiable conclusions. That said, ancient DNA is
already making significant contributions to our understanding of the
spread of the Neolithic package into Europe, and it is helping to define
a 'European' component among the Tarim Basin population of
western China.
The two chapters on languages will, for many readers, be a
revelation. They are brilliant, judicious essays of lasting value with
wide implications for our understanding of the archaeological evidence.
Many complex issues are addressed. Among them, as one might have
expected, is the long-debated question of the spread of Indo-European
into Europe. Did it come from Anatolia with the advance of the Neolithic
c. 7000 BC or from the steppe region several millennia later? The
evidence for both views is fully presented and debated and, although it
now points firmly in favour of the Anatolian hypotheses, the authors
carefully avoid arriving at a definitive conclusion, preferring to leave
the question open. Similarly, while seeming to favour the idea that
Celtic developed in the Atlantic zone, no decisive position is taken. In
their desire to be judicious the writers seem, sometimes, to be bending
over backwards to stay upright. These chapters, on languages and
genetics, by presenting the evidence strictly within the parameters of
the specific discipline, nicely avoid the circular arguments that
sometimes arise from cherry picking and juxtaposing disparate data. To
what degree the three disciplines can ever be brought together in mutual
support remains an open question.
The success of the chapters on languages and genetics in providing
overarching perspectives raises the question of whether the volume would
have benefited from other chapters of this sort. One theme, almost
totally obscured by the structure of the book, is the importance of
geography to our understanding of the human story. The maritime
interface of Europe and its riverine corridors and the expansive swathe
of steppe sweeping from the Great Hungarian Plain to the Altai Mountains
are among the geographical givens that have dramatically influenced
human development. This is sometimes made explicit, for example in
'Early Food Production in Southwestern Europe' by Zilhao and
in 'The Post-Neolithic of Eastern Europe' by Hanks, but an
overview of geography, constraining and facilitating connectivity, would
have been a great help to the reader. Another theme worthy of specific
consideration is climate. Most authors refer, in passing, to shifts in
climate affecting cultural changes, but broad consideration of climatic
variation through the Holocene would have provided an invaluable
background.
One of the most difficult tasks the editors had to face was how to
divide the two regions into coherent chapters to allow an even coverage.
For both regions they decided that the Early Palaeolithic and Upper
Palaeolithic should be dealt with on a region-wide basis. Generally this
works well although Sharon, commissioned to write 'The Early
Prehistory of Western and Central Asia', chose to concentrate
entirely on the Levant. From the beginning of the Neolithic onwards the
mega-regions are divided into smaller geographical zones. For Western
and Central Asia five chapters are devoted to the origins and
development of Neolithic societies. Bar-Yosef offers a thorough overview
of the origins of sedentism, concentrating on the Levant, Syria and
south-eastern Turkey. Thereafter, separate chapters on the Levant,
Syria, Mesopotamia and Iran, and Anatolia take the story up to the third
millennium. Inevitably there is some overlap, but there is also
fragmentation, making it difficult for the reader to gain an overall
impression of the broad trajectory of change. That said, the individual
chapters are cohesive and provide useful accounts of regional
developments. Separate chapters are devoted to the Caucasus, Arabia,
Central Asia and Southern Siberia. These cover the full span of
prehistory and provide very useful introductions (and bibliographies) to
regions not often considered in the more general literature. Curiously,
for the crucial regions of steppe lying between Central Asia and
southern Siberia, it is necessary to turn to the chapter on 'The
Post-Neolithic in Eastern Europe'. Splitting Central Asia in this
way has obscured the important connections that link the different
ecological zones.
The treatment of Europe and the Mediterranean (with emphasis on its
northern shore), from the Neolithic period onwards, suffers to some
extent by the way the continent is arbitrarily divided into western,
central and eastern parts. Although western, or Atlantic, Europe has a
degree of cultural coherence over time, a better divide for the rest
would have been into the riverine north and east, and the Mediterranean
south. As it is, 'The Later Prehistory of Central and Northern
Europe' by Harding has to cover the region from Sicily to Sweden
from the Beaker period to the Iron Age. The only way in which the author
is able to give a degree of coherence to such diversity is by
considering themes such as settlement, death and burial, the use of
metals and warfare. In the end, no scheme of regional divisions is
perfect, but by dividing Europe and the Mediterranean in this way,
essential connections are obscured. While this in no way diminishes the
value of the individual chapters, it can leave the reader with a partial
and sometimes rather distorted picture.
The authors have all been keenly aware of the challenges presented
by writing regional essays of this kind. They have approached the task
in different ways--narrative, thematic, problematic, culture by
culture--reflecting many different traditions of scholarship. The
constraints of length have also required careful selection, which has
been done with wisdom born of a familiarity with the subject matter. The
result is a rich melange--a taster's menu, both satisfying and
tantalising.
Something must be said of the production values, which are in
general high, as one would expect of Cambridge University Press. The
editing of the illustrations, however, has been surprisingly slack. Some
images have been left untrimmed, plans that authors intended to be
placed together for comparisons have been dispersed and printed at a
variety of scales and many of the images have been printed at excessive
size for what they show.
According to the jacket blurb, the Cambridge world prehistory is
designed to serve as a resource for students of archaeology and others
"looking to research a particular topic, tradition, region or
period within prehistory". Judged by these criteria the volume is a
resounding success. It is an invaluable and unparalleled resource,
allowing the reader to get quickly into a chosen subject area, guided by
an expert overview and supported by a well-chosen bibliography. It will
be the first port of call for all students for years to come.
doi: 10.15184/aqy.2015.42
References
CHAGNON, N.A. 2013. Noble savages: my life among two dangerous
tribes--the Yanomamo and the anthropologists. New York: Simon &
Schuster.
CHANG, K.C. 1989. Ancient China and its anthropological
significance, in C.C. Lamberg-Karlovsky (ed). Archaeological thought in
America'. 135-66. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
http://dx.doi.org/ 10.1017/CB09780511558221.011
DIAMOND, J. 2012. The world until yesterday: what can we learn from
traditional societies? London: Allen Lane.
LATOUR, B. 2009. Perspectivism: 'type' or
'bomb'? Anthropology Today 25: 1-2. http://dx.doi. org
/10.1111 /). 1467-8322.2009.00652.x
LEVI-STRAUSS, C. 1961. World on the wane. New York: Criterion.
RENFREW, C. & P. Bahn. 2012. Archaeology: theories, methods and
practice. 6th edition. London: Thames & Hudson.