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This book offers an anthropological analysis of how craft
production changed in relation to the development of complex
societies in northern China. It focuses on the production and use
of food containers-pottery and bronze vessels-during the late
prehistoric and early historic periods. A major theme is how
production and use of prestige vessels changed in relation to
increase in degree of social inequality. The research and writing
of this book took place intermittently over a period of several
years. When I first outlined the book in 1994, I planned to offer a
more limited and descriptive account of social change during the
late prehistoric period. In considering the human desire to display
status with prestige goods, my initial approach emphasized how the
case of northern China was similar to other areas of the world. I
began to realize that in order to adequately explain how and why
craft production changed in ancient China, it was crucial to
consider the belief systems that motivated produc tion and use of
food containers. Similarly, a striking characteristic of ancient
China that I needed to include in the analysis was the
preponderance of food containers, rather than other goods, that
were buried with the deceased. I decided to investigate the social
and ritual uses of food, bever ages, and containers during more
than one period of Chinese history. Some strong patterns could have
emerged during the late prehistoric period."
A comprehensive account of a pioneering archaeological project in
the province of Shandong that transformed understandings of
regional settlement patterns From 1995 to 2007, researchers from
China and the United States conducted a systematic, full-coverage
regional archaeological survey in southeastern Shandong Province,
China, covering an area of more than 1,400 square kilometers. This
pioneering multiyear international project transformed the
archaeological understanding of regional settlement patterns from
the Neolithic to the Han period in southeastern Shandong. As an
update of the 2012 synthesis published in Chinese, this volume is
the most detailed account of the project in English. The team
discovered many new sites, including the earliest known Neolithic
settlements in the area, and revealed distinctly different regional
settlement patterns in the hinterlands of the two largest late
Neolithic sites, Liangchengzhen and Yaowangcheng. The book includes
field procedures, methods of analysis, and descriptions of major
sites generously illustrated with maps as well as photographs of
key artifacts and archaeological localities. Distributed for the
Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History
This volume provides case studies about successful strategies
employed in diverse world areas for the protection of
archaeological heritage resources. Some chapters focus on a search
for solutions arrived at by diverse groups of people working in
specific areas rather than simply describing loss of cultural
heritage. Other chapters provide a long-term view of intensified
efforts at protection of archaeological resources. The authors
describe challenges and solutions derived by concerned people in
eastern Asia (China, Japan, Thailand), West Africa, Easter Island,
Jordan, Honduras and more than one area of Peru. All of the authors
draw upon deep, personal involvement with the protection of
cultural heritage in each area. This volume is a timely addition to
a growing number of conferences and publications about the
management of cultural heritage-both archaeological and historical.
This book offers an anthropological analysis of how craft
production changed in relation to the development of complex
societies in northern China. It focuses on the production and use
of food containers-pottery and bronze vessels-during the late
prehistoric and early historic periods. A major theme is how
production and use of prestige vessels changed in relation to
increase in degree of social inequality. The research and writing
of this book took place intermittently over a period of several
years. When I first outlined the book in 1994, I planned to offer a
more limited and descriptive account of social change during the
late prehistoric period. In considering the human desire to display
status with prestige goods, my initial approach emphasized how the
case of northern China was similar to other areas of the world. I
began to realize that in order to adequately explain how and why
craft production changed in ancient China, it was crucial to
consider the belief systems that motivated produc tion and use of
food containers. Similarly, a striking characteristic of ancient
China that I needed to include in the analysis was the
preponderance of food containers, rather than other goods, that
were buried with the deceased. I decided to investigate the social
and ritual uses of food, bever ages, and containers during more
than one period of Chinese history. Some strong patterns could have
emerged during the late prehistoric period."
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