Some Comments on Situations in the Midcontinental Middle Woodland

IF 0.3 Q1 Arts and Humanities Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology Pub Date : 2020-09-01 DOI:10.1080/01461109.2020.1826881
Sarah E. Baires
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

ABSTRACT This discussion provides commentary on the articles included in this guest-edited issue of the Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology on Middle Woodland ceremonial situations in the North American midcontinent. Articles in this issue discuss and navigate how situation theory may be applied to the complex interactions of Middle Woodland societies by examining how diverse historical and social factors influence broader social interactions. These articles move beyond concepts like the interaction sphere perspective first coined in the 1960s (by Joseph Caldwell) to examine the ways Middle Woodland communities—in all their diversity—created and shared similar conditions of being while also maintaining a diversity of materially evident ceremonial practices. Situation theory allows the authors of these articles to examine how such diverse (both geographically and socially) societies became part of, and contributed to, a dynamic and multiscalar Middle Woodland “situation.” By focusing on assemblages, materialities, and processes of becoming, these articles provide novel perspectives on how persons (both human and nonhuman) converge to create particular situations and conditions of diverse relationships that result in shared sociocultural experiences.
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关于中大陆中部林地情况的几点看法
摘要本次讨论对本期《中大陆考古杂志》客座编辑的关于北美中大陆中部林地仪式情况的文章进行了评论。本期文章通过研究不同的历史和社会因素如何影响更广泛的社会互动,讨论并引导情境理论如何应用于中林地社会的复杂互动。这些文章超越了20世纪60年代首次提出的互动领域视角(Joseph Caldwell)等概念,研究了中部林地社区的多样性如何创造和共享相似的生存条件,同时也保持了物质上明显的仪式实践的多样性。情境理论使这些文章的作者能够研究这些多样化的(地理和社会)社会是如何成为动态和多尺度的中林地“情境”的一部分并对其做出贡献的,这些文章为人们(包括人类和非人类)如何聚集在一起,创造不同关系的特殊情况和条件,从而产生共同的社会文化体验提供了新的视角。
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