Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Preface
- 1 Two tribes: questions of theory, scale and explanation
- 2 Hello, goodbye: Iberian prehistory and traditional archaeology
- 3 Another one bites the dust: the implications of the absolute chronology
- 4 Getting better: south-east Spain, the cultural framework 5000–500 bc
- 5 Dancin' in the dark? Adaptation and intensification in south–east Spain
- 6 Centrefield: recent models of intensification and cultural change in south-east Spain
- 7 Into the groove: system scale and technological innovation in south-east Spain
- 8 Out of reach? Complexity, interaction and integration in south-east Spain
- 9 Eliminator: models and the archaeological record in south-east Spain
- 10 Strong persuader: intensification and interaction in Iberia and the west Mediterranean
- 11 With or without you: variability, evaluation and complexity
- Bibliography
- Index
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Preface
- 1 Two tribes: questions of theory, scale and explanation
- 2 Hello, goodbye: Iberian prehistory and traditional archaeology
- 3 Another one bites the dust: the implications of the absolute chronology
- 4 Getting better: south-east Spain, the cultural framework 5000–500 bc
- 5 Dancin' in the dark? Adaptation and intensification in south–east Spain
- 6 Centrefield: recent models of intensification and cultural change in south-east Spain
- 7 Into the groove: system scale and technological innovation in south-east Spain
- 8 Out of reach? Complexity, interaction and integration in south-east Spain
- 9 Eliminator: models and the archaeological record in south-east Spain
- 10 Strong persuader: intensification and interaction in Iberia and the west Mediterranean
- 11 With or without you: variability, evaluation and complexity
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
This is a book about the later prehistory of one part of Europe, the west Mediterranean, with the main attention devoted to three provinces in south-east Spain. These provinces are recognised by European prehistorians as containing one of the key sequences for the study of the emergence of more complex cultures in the third and second millennia be. The emergence of these cultures is placed within the wider context of contemporary cultures in Spain and Portugal, and in other parts of the west Mediterranean. While aiming to understand the specific details of cultural change within south-east Spain, I am convinced of the need to place such localised analyses within a wider comparative context, and to examine the emergence of complexity as a general anthropological problem.
My interest in the prehistory of south-east Spain was aroused during my student days by reading Colin Renfrew's (1967a) critique of diffusionist explanations for the development of Copper and Bronze Age cultures in this area. Such an explanation had been expressed most recently in the English language in Beatrice Blance's Edinburgh doctoral thesis and in her subsequent publications (1960, 1961, 1964). Diffusionism also had a central role in the synthesis of Iberian prehistory published by Savory (1968). If, as Renfrew argued, diffusionist explanations were flawed, both theoretically and empirically, then there was considerable scope for research into the autonomous decelopment of complexity.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Emerging ComplexityThe Later Prehistory of South-East Spain, Iberia and the West Mediterranean, pp. xi - xivPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1990