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Título
Tracking the social lives of things: biographical insights into Bronze Age pottery in Spain
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Late Bronze Age
Cogotas I culture
Pit deposition
Iberian Peninsula
Cultural biography
Pottery assemblage
Clasificación UNESCO
5504.05 Prehistoria
5505.01 Arqueología
Fecha de publicación
2015
Editor
Cambridge University Press
Citación
Blanco-González, A. (2014): "Tracking the Social Life of Things. Biographical insights into Bronze Age pottery in Spain." Antiquity, 88, Issue 340, pp. 441-455. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0003598X00101103
Resumen
Pottery has sometimes been compared to a living organism in its cycle of birth, life and death or discard. A biographical approach
to an unusual assemblage of pottery from the Late Bronze Age site of Pico Castro in central Spain suggests that they had been used together at a communal feast. The shared social memory that they acquired thereby conferred on them a special status that resulted in their eventual placement in the pit, fine wares and coarse wares together. Thus the varied biographies of the individual vessels— and the individual sherds—eventually converged not only in their discard but in the episodes that preceded it.
URI
ISSN
0003-598X
DOI
10.1017/S0003598X00101103
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