Mediterranean Archaeological Landscapes: Current Issues.
Knapp, A. Bernard
Mediterranean Archaeological Landscapes: Current Issues. Edited by
EFFIE ATHANASSOPOULOS and LUANN WANDSNIDER. Philadelphia: UNIVERSITY
MUSEUM, 2004. Pp. xii + 242, illus. $39.95.
Ever since the onset of regional archaeological survey projects in
the Mediterranean (arguably the British School at Rome's Central
Italy and South Etruria Projects), not long after the publication of
Gordon Willey's pioneering Viru Valley Project in Peru, it has
seemed obvious that there is no single disciplinary canon to guide those
who conduct field surveys, no blueprint for establishing a field
methodology. Indeed, the very diversity of regional survey archaeology
in the Mediterranean, and the very different histories, organizational
and institutional structures, and attitudes to both methodology and
theory within Mediterranean countries themselves, are what make the
field so dynamic and interesting. More recently, however, and in
particular with Mesoamericanist Richard Blanton's critical review
("Mediterranean Myopia," Antiquity 75 [2001]: 627-29) of the
massive, five-volume set The Archaeology of Mediterranean Landscapes,
ed. G. Barker and D. Mattingly (Oxford: Oxbow, 1999), it has become
evident that practitioners of certain "schools" of regional
archaeological survey no longer deem alternative or varying approaches
to be equally viable.
The volume under review comprises revised versions of ten papers
(plus an editors' introduction) first presented in an electronic
symposium, "Crossroads in Mediterranean Landscape
Archaeology," at the Society for American Archaeology's annual
meeting in April 2001. It is co-edited by two scholars trained in very
different archaeological traditions: Athanassopoulos (Old World or
Mediterranean culture historical-geographic tradition) and Wandsnider
(New World or Americanist processual tradition). The volume strives to
bring together a diverse array of case studies stretching from eastern
Spain (Barton et al.) to the Black Sea's Sinop peninsula (Doonan)
and to the Jordanian plateau (Hill), and from the Middle Palaeolithic to
the "Modern" periods, a temporal span of some 35,000 years and
a spatial expanse of some 3700 kilometers (east-west). Wilkinson,
moreover, supplies a chapter comparing and contrasting Mediterranean and
Near Eastern survey methodologies, the latter avowedly extensive in
approach and, as Wilkinson emphasizes, usually conducted at the
"expense" of the "offsite" survey record, upland
settlement, and habitation in the semi-arid steppe zone of the region.
The attempt to produce a coherent volume out of all this diversity was
no easy editorial task. How successful is the effort and, given that
some scholars now seem to presume there are certain ways we must do
field surveys, how worthwhile is it?
The first point that must be made relates to coverage: no matter
how spread out in time and space the case studies may be, this volume
certainly does not offer a representative sample of landscape
archaeology in the Mediterranean. Of over 150 different islands in the
Mediterranean, for example, it treats only two: Cyprus and Kythera in
the Aegean. Beyond Greece, Turkey, and Italy, which do receive
treatment, there are an additional thirteen "mainland"
countries unrepresented in the volume. Thus prospective readers should
be aware of the misleading title. The subtitle ("Current
Issues") is equally misleading, as the range of viewpoints
expressed is decidedly narrow, stemming primarily from an
"Americanist" tradition. The introduction to the volume
(Athanassopoulos and Wandsnider), for example, seeks to present the
history and current state of landscape archaeology in the Mediterranean.
This necessarily brief but knowledgeable overview touches upon many
aspects of the history of regional survey archaeology in the
Mediterranean; less satisfactorily, it implies that "current
issues" in this field cannot but benefit from the methodological
contributions of "Americanist New Archaeology."
Having suggested that postmodernist, agency-centered, revisionist critiques of the New Archaeology (and the critique of those critiques)
have resulted in a "healthy diversity of archaeological approaches,
as recently surveyed in Americanist archaeology" (p. 11), the
authors list four different approaches to studying archaeological
landscapes: (1) modified, environmentally oriented, functionalist,
settlement-pattern studies; (2) studies that reflect human agency and
the "reflexivity" of landscape monuments; (3) taphonomical and
evolutionary studies of the landscape; and (4) attempts to relate
monument construction to evolutionary principles (essentially unexplored
here). Nowhere do they draw attention to phenomenological approaches,
off-site survey techniques and analyses (except with reference to
Given's paper), geomorphological studies (except by inference under
taphonomic approaches), or the peopling of past landscapes, all of which
are key features practiced by many regional survey projects in the
Mediterranean today.
In her own contribution to the volume, co-editor Wandsnider
suggests that because of difficulties in determining the spatial extent
of "sites" as well as their temporal resolution, amongst other
reasons, we should abandon regional settlement studies and adopt an
approach based on the "complex formational nature of archaeological
landscape deposits" (p. 72). A closer reading reveals that her
agenda is Binfordian in inspiration, processual in approach, and (still)
essentially anti-historical in attitude (compare the earlier volume
Wandsnider co-edited with J. Rossignol, entitled Space, Time, and
Archaeological Landscapes [New York: Plenum, 1992]). Her call for a
"metaphysical shift" in conceptualizing archaeological
landscapes (pp. 74-75) involves a change from focusing on people and
individual activities to detailing places (a major step backward), a
shift from site-based to an artifact- or feature-based approach (as long
as the focus remains on taphonomic processes and the formational history
of the landscape), and the indivisible nature of the interrelationships
amongst people, artifacts, and landscape. Whilst much current work has
long since adopted the last two aspects (and would, accordingly, find
the first aspect somewhat contradictory), I doubt that many regional
survey archaeologists in the Mediterranean would concur with
Wandsnider's vision of this metaphysical shift: "where
formerly functional, ethnographic, and historic models of agent, time,
and causation were embraced, today we see increasing use of
multi-temporal, multi-processual modes of interpretation" (p. 75,
emphasis added).
To be sure, regional survey archaeology in the Mediterranean
continues to change in response to ever more complex and engaging ways
of treating past landscapes; in that respect it is useful to have a
volume that offers different (i.e., non-European, non-Mediterranean)
theoretical perspectives. A contextual-historical approach, however,
offers a richer, more inclusive and interactive perspective on
landscapes than one based on a narrowly conceived, ecologically based,
processual design. By linking together dynamically the physical,
environmental form, the human exploitation, and the social experience of
the landscape, one gains a more comprehensive understanding of cultural
process, human agency, and the reciprocal nature and mutual impact of
the relations between people and their landscape(s).
The relentlessly processual focus championed by Wandsnider
characterizes several other papers in this volume and distinguishes them
markedly from most contemporary fieldwork and research in this region.
Moreover, the "scientistic" jargon and quantitative analyses
are as ubiquitous and impenetrable in these chapters as they are in the
pages of American Antiquity. Compare, for example, the somewhat tortured
and multi-layered discourse on a methodology grounded in the principles
of adaptation and maladaptation (Hill), which goes on for pages, with
the concise, clear statement on five key aspects of intensive survey
archaeology in the Mediterranean (Given), which takes up one paragraph.
Most Mediterranean survey archaeologists would not, I think, envision
the long-term history of human occupation in the Mediterranean basin as
"... the human transformation from simple consumer and ecosystem
participant to ecosystem modifier to ecosystem manager" (Barton et
al., pp. 101-2), with all its evolutionary overtones and implications.
The lack of a firm editorial hand leads to several contradictory
statements on methodology: compare Gregory's sampling strategy
(also Given, Hill) and his plea to leave as little trace of survey
activity as possible on the landscape (i.e., collecting as few artifacts
as necessary to identify temporal and cultural components) with
Doonan's call for "total coverage" survey and a 100%
collection strategy, or with Barton et al.'s strategy "to
collect all prehistoric artefacts." In light of the last point, one
can only wonder what the Spanish-American team (Barton et al.) does when
it comes across Bronze and Iron Age, Classical, Byzantine, Medieval, and
modern artifacts--do they discard them or ignore them? In either case,
they are subject to the indignation rightly expressed in papers by
Athanassopoulos and Diacopoulos, who criticize survey practices and
approaches which fail to see that not only did people inhabit these
landscapes between A.D. 700-2000, they also left behind--in most
cases--the bulk of the material remains that pepper Mediterranean
archaeological landscapes.
Finally, however much I applaud the use of archaeological theory to
interpret and understand the past (and past landscapes), the
prescriptive approaches that dominate the chapters by Doonan, Barton et
al., Hill, and Kardulias and Yerkes seem to me to cut directly against
the grain of survey methodologies as practiced in the Mediterranean. In
other words, it is not World Systems theory, evolutionary adaptations,
or even the Annales school of historical research that should set the
parameters of regional survey methodology, but rather the landscape
itself and the people who inhabit it--in all their diverse topographic,
geomorphological, economic, and socio-political aspects.
The well-read Mediterranean survey archaeologist will realize that
the contents of four chapters in this volume overlap very substantially
with the same authors' publications elsewhere. Two other chapters
stand out for all the wrong reasons. Athanassopoulos maintains quite
perversely and incorrectly that the medieval period has been completely
neglected by archaeological research in the eastern Mediterranean. To
argue this point she sets up a series of straw men ("orthodox"
Classical archaeology, the dominance of prehistorians over survey
archaeology, the lack of sensitivity to particular historical contexts)
and engages with very limited datasets through questionable assertions
(e.g., difficulties in relating archaeological data to administrative
documents) and dubious generalizations (e.g., the theoretical value or
applicability of a Braudellian, Annales-oriented approach for
structuring field methodology in Mediterranean surveys). Doonan sets up
a series of issues--communication, interaction, production,
consumption--that he proposes to examine by a "multi-sited"
(whatever that means) and three-tiered approach, but fails utterly to
convey to the reader how his ambitious, multi-layered methodologies (p.
48, table 3.1) will confront those issues, especially given the very
limited tracts of land thus far covered in the Sinop peninsula (p. 51,
table 3.2). Doonan's chapter describes an overly ambitious project
too prescriptive in its assumptions and too keen to pack in every
theoretical and procedural trend in contemporary archaeology.
This brief review has perhaps been overly critical and has given
too little credit to the data-rich nature of several chapters in the
volume. Many chapters are of interest on multiple levels, provide
insight into periods too often neglected in Mediterranean archaeology
generally, and merit attention for their very diversity of approach.
Specialists will find much of this material transparent, and it does
exemplify well the work and perspectives of some Americanist
archaeologists working here and there in the Mediterranean. Its wider
relevance to scholars working on landscape archaeology elsewhere in the
world will likely be less transparent and appealing. This is
unfortunate, as it will do little to dispel the misguided notion of
"myopia" in Mediterranean landscape archaeology, or to
convince skeptics that there is (still) more than one way to conduct
regional archaeological surveys.
A. BERNARD KNAPP
UNIVERSITY OF GLASGOW