Foreign countries: The development of ethnoarchaeology in sub-Saharan Africa |
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Authors: | Scott MacEachern |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Bowdoin College, 04011 Brunswick, Maine |
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Abstract: | Ethnoarchaeological research in sub-Saharan Africa began as a distinct study in the late 1960s and early 1970s and developed rather differently in different areas of the continent. This variability is related to a number of research circumstances in these regions: the presence of an important francophone archaeological tradition in West Africa, palaeoanthropological studies that have taken place in East and southern Africa over the last 60 years, and a concentration upon the study of forager groups in different parts of the continent. Ethnoarchaeology in West Africa, in East and Central Africa, and in southern Africa are examined in turn, with particular attention paid to the influence of research lineages in each region and to changes in methodologies and theoretical perspectives through time. |
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Keywords: | ethnoarchaeology Africa methodology research traditions foragers |
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