From the Axial Age to the Fifth Sun. The articulation of the local with the global

IF 1.4 1区 历史学 0 ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeological Dialogues Pub Date : 2022-06-01 DOI:10.1017/S1380203822000137
S. Stoddart
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Abstract

and that the authors themselves do not view Athenian citizenship as a standard norm against which all other modes of belonging should be measured. But such a presentation of contrasting examples is a reminder of how deeply ingrained a Greekand Roman-centric perspective still is. Riva and Grau Mira acknowledge the depth of this challenge themselves – they note, ‘This process of decentring and decolonization : : : has been put in jeopardy by recent Big History studies of long-term Mediterranean trajectories where the grand narrative’s preference for integration is largely for the Graeco-Roman world and the east of the basin’. The implication is that the Greek and Roman worlds remain at the centre, and ‘new additions’ made in the name of decolonization or decentring must be integrated with them, instead of the reverse. Riva and Grau Mira’s emphasis is quite rightly placed on the critical contributions of microhistorical archaeology; the degree to whichMediterranean archaeology has been colonized by our obsession with Greece and Rome (Dietler 2005), however, means that many of the themes and phenomena explored by a global archaeology will have been established within the same heavily biased context. That is to say, they have been identified because of their relevance to Greece and Rome.Without great care, the exercise in one-sided integration seems likely to repeat itself under a slightly different guise. Riva and Grau Mira are, of course, no strangers to this issue either. They note that their analysis of citizenship in south-eastern Iberia is only possible because notions of Athenian citizenship have been dramatically overhauled in recent years. Even so, we are left considering south-eastern Iberian as belonging as part of a much broader, more socially rooted form of ‘citizenship’ instead of discussing Athenian citizenship as one form of collective belonging exhibited more broadly in urbanizing contexts. The difference is subtle, but the implications are great. I do not mean to suggest that Mediterranean-wide comparison is impossible; on the contrary, it is essential. But perhaps a modified structure would be more fruitful. Instead of comparing seemingly ‘anomalous’ micro-scale examples to sweeping trends, like might be paired with like, and comparanda could be limited to equally microscopic case studies, evaluated through a shared bottomup process. By introducing data from traditionally marginalized regions and contexts into direct conversation with Greek and Romanmaterials (or even eschewing them altogether), a more balanced knowledge baseline might be established. From that baseline, new themes and phenomena may be identified that hold more equal relevance for all Mediterranean regions. Once such a knowledge landscape has been established – one that is less overtly colonized by its very nature – a decolonized global archaeology of the 1st-millennium Mediterranean may be a realistic goal.
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从轴心时代到第五个太阳。本地与全球的衔接
作者自己也不认为雅典公民身份是衡量所有其他归属模式的标准规范。但这样一个对比鲜明的例子提醒我们,以希腊罗马为中心的观点仍然根深蒂固。Riva和Grau Mira承认了这一挑战的深度——他们指出,“最近对地中海长期轨迹的大历史研究表明,这种分散和非殖民化的过程已经处于危险之中,在这些研究中,大叙事倾向于整合的主要是希腊罗马世界和盆地东部”。言下之意是,希腊和罗马世界仍然处于中心地位,以非殖民化或去中心化的名义所做的“新补充”必须与它们相结合,而不是相反。里瓦和格劳·米拉的重点非常正确地放在微观历史考古学的重要贡献上;然而,地中海考古学被我们对希腊和罗马的痴迷所殖民的程度(Dietler 2005)意味着,全球考古学探索的许多主题和现象将在同样严重偏见的背景下建立起来。也就是说,它们被确认是因为它们与希腊和罗马的关联。如果不多加小心,单方面一体化的做法似乎很可能以一种略微不同的伪装重演。当然,里瓦和格劳·米拉对这个问题也不陌生。他们指出,他们对伊比利亚东南部公民身份的分析之所以有可能,是因为近年来雅典公民身份的概念发生了巨大的变化。即便如此,我们仍然将东南部伊比利亚视为更广泛、更根植于社会的“公民身份”形式的一部分,而不是将雅典公民身份作为一种形式的集体归属感在城市化背景下更广泛地展示出来。差别很细微,但意义重大。我并不是说地中海范围内的比较是不可能的;相反,它是必要的。但或许修改后的结构会更有成效。与其将看似“异常”的微观案例与普遍趋势进行比较,还不如将相似之处与相似之处相结合,比较可以限制在同样微观的案例研究中,通过共享的自下而上的过程进行评估。通过将来自传统边缘化地区和背景的数据引入与希腊和罗马材料的直接对话(甚至完全避开它们),可能会建立一个更平衡的知识基线。从这个基线出发,可以确定对所有地中海区域具有同等意义的新主题和现象。一旦建立了这样一种知识景观——一种从本质上看不那么明显被殖民的景观——一千年地中海非殖民化的全球考古可能是一个现实的目标。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
5.60%
发文量
25
期刊介绍: Archaeology is undergoing rapid changes in terms of its conceptual framework and its place in contemporary society. In this challenging intellectual climate, Archaeological Dialogues has become one of the leading journals for debating innovative issues in archaeology. Firmly rooted in European archaeology, it now serves the international academic community for discussing the theories and practices of archaeology today. True to its name, debate takes a central place in Archaeological Dialogues.
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