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首页> 外文期刊>Canadian Geographer >Unravelling identities on archaeological borderlands: Late Woodland Western Basin and Ontario Iroquoian Traditions in the Lower Great Lakes region
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Unravelling identities on archaeological borderlands: Late Woodland Western Basin and Ontario Iroquoian Traditions in the Lower Great Lakes region

机译:考古边疆地区的独特身份:下大湖区晚期的林地西部盆地和安大略易洛魁族的传统

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摘要

Borders, boundaries, frontiers, and borderlands are complex things and processes which have become important foci in social sciences over the last two decades. Using archaeological border theory, grounded in anthropological border theory, which focuses on the cultural dimensions of borders, the nature and function of borders and boundaries in the archaeological record of societies indigenous to the Lower Great Lakes can be explored. An archaeological border theory examines how notions of identity, ethnicity, and material culture interplay with borders, allowing for more complex interpretations of archaeological materials and sites. Applying this theory to archaeological evidence from the interaction zones, or borderlands, between archaeologically defined Late Woodland traditions illustrates how these concepts can lead to more complete understandings of the way people lived in the past. Examining borders in the past allows social scientists to recognize their historically situated, fluid nature and will lead to greater consideration of the socially constructed nature of borders in the present.
机译:边界,边界,边界和边疆是复杂的事物和过程,在过去的二十年中,它们已成为社会科学中的重要焦点。利用以人类学边界理论为基础的考古边界理论,该理论侧重于边界的文化维度,可以探索下大湖地区土著社会的考古记录中边界和边界的性质和功能。考古边界理论研究了身份,种族和物质文化概念与边界的相互作用,从而可以对考古物质和遗址进行更复杂的解释。将这一理论应用于考古学定义的晚期林地传统之间相互作用区域或边界地区的考古学证据,说明了这些概念如何可以导致人们对过去的生活方式有更完整的理解。过去对边界的审查使社会科学家能够认识到其历史上的位置,流动的性质,并将导致对现在边界的社会建构性质的更多考虑。

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