Section 1: Introduction
1.1. Globalization: some basics. An introduction to The Routledge Handbook of Archaeology and Globalization. Tamar Hodos
1.2. Distinguishing Past Globalizations
Justin Jennings
1.3. Globalization, Connectivities and Networks: an
archaeological perspective
Carl Knappett
1.4. Economic Aspects of Globalization in the Past Material
World
Gary M. Feinman
1.5. Globalization Thinking and the Past
Robbie Robertson
Section 2: Africa
2.1. Africa in and of the World: Archaeological Perspectives on
Globalization in the Longue Durée
Paul J. Lane
2.2. Exploring Aegyptiaca and their Material Agency throughout
Global History
Miguel John Versluys
2.3. GLOBALIZATION: CONTACT BETWEEN WEST AFRICA, NORTH AFRICA
AND EUROPE DURING THE EUROPEAN MEDIEVAL PERIOD
Scott MacEachern
2.4. The Swahili and Globalization in the Indian Ocean
Chapurukha Kusimba
2.5. European Colonialism and Globalization in Africa in the
Nineteenth Century CE
Lydia Wilson Marshall
2.6. Future Material Culture: Chinese Construction in Africa and
the Consequences for African Cultural Heritage
Paul Lane, Cornelia Kleinitz & Yongilang Gao
2.7. The Mobile Phone – A Global Good? Modern Material Culture
and Communication Technology in Africa
Julia Verne
Section 3: Americas
3.1 Globalization Processes as Recognized in the Americas
Alexander Geurds
3.2 Olmec Globalization: a Mesoamerican Archipelago of
Complexity
Robert M. Rosenswig
3.3 On the Horizon: Art, Valuables and Large-Scale Interaction
Networks in the Ancient Andes
George F. Lau
3.4 Foreigners from Far-Off Islands: Long-Distance Exchange
between Western Mesoamerica and Coastal South America (600-1200
CE): a Globalization Analysis
Alexander Geurds
3.5 Globalization without Markets? Population Movement and Other
Integrative Mechanisms in the Ancient Andes
Bill Sillar
3.6 Conquest Worlds: Aztec and Spanish Experiences in Mexico,
1428-1570 CE
Frances Berdan
3.7 Globalization and the Early Modern Atlantic World, c.
1500-1700 CE
Charles E. Orser, Jr.
Section 4: Australasia and Oceania
4.1. Globalization Thinking in Australasia and Oceania
Ian Lilley
4.2. The Tongan Maritime State: Oceanic Globalization, Polity
Collapse and Chaotic Interaction
Geoffrey Clark
4.3. Australian Lithic Technology: Evolution, Dispersion and
Connectivity
Peter Hiscock & Tim Maloney
4.4. Edges of Worlds: Torres Strait Islander Peripheral
Participation in Ancient Globalizations
Ian J. McNiven
4.5. Melanesia Maritime Middlemen and Pre-Colonial
Glocalization
Ian Lilley
4.6. Disentangling the Lapita Interaction Spheres: the Global,
the Provincial and the Local
Christophe Sand
4.7. East Polynesian Connectivity
Marshall Weisler & Richard Walter
Section 5: East Asia
5.1. East Asia as a Laboratory for Early Globalization
Gideon Shelach-Lavi
5.2. The Spread of Domesticated Plant Resources in Prehistoric
Northeast Asia
Gyoung-Ah Lee
5.3. Prehistoric Networks across the Korea Strait (5000-1000
BCE): ‘Early Globalization’ during the Jomon Period in Northwest
Kyushu?
Ilona R. Bausch
5.4. Colonialism in the Time of Globalization – the Western Zhou
Yan State Revisited
Yitzchak Jaffe
5.5. Globalization at the Crossroads: the Case of Southeast
China during the Pre- and Early Imperial Period
Francis Allard
5.6. Global Dynamics in Local Processes of Iron Age Inner
Asia
Bryan K. Miller & Ursula Brosseder
5.7. Tombs of Xianbei Conquerors and Central Asians in Sixth
Century CE Northern China: a Globalizing Perspective
Mandy Jui-man Wu
Section 6: Europe
6.1. Deep Histories of Globalization and Europe: beyond
Eurocentrism
Martin Pitts
6.2. Small, Medium, and Large: Globalization Perspectives on the
Afro-Eurasian Bronze Age
Helle Vandkilde
6.3. Local Elites Globalized in Death: a Practice Approach to
Early Iron Age Hallstatt C/D Chieftains’ Burials in Northwest
Europe
David Fontijn & Sasja van der Vaart-Verschoof
6.4. Connectivity and Social Change. Roman Goods outside the
Empire (100 BCE – 400 CE)
Mariana Egri
6.5. URBANISM AND EXCHANGE IN THE NORTH ATLANTIC/BALTIC,
600-1000 CE
Søren M. Sindbæk
6.6. Globalization and China. Materiality and Civilité in
Post-Medieval Europe
Martin Pitts
6.7. Connecting the Global with the Local through the Prism of
Imprisonment: the Case of Kilmainham Gaol, Ireland
Laura McAtackney
Section 7: Mediterranean
7.1 The Global Mediterranean: a Material-Cultural
Perspective
Miguel John Versluys
7.2 A Globalizing Bronze and Iron Age Mediterranean
Susan Sherratt
7.3 Classical Connections and Mediterranean Practices: Exploring
Connectivity and Local Interactions
Peter van Dommelen
7.4 THE GLOBALIZED ROMAN WORLD
ROBERT WITCHER
7.5 The Rise and Fall of Empires in the Islamic Mediterranean
(600-1600 CE): Political Change, the Economy and Material
Culture
Petra Sijpesteijn
7.6 The Renaissance in Material Culture: Material Mimesis as
Force and Evidence of Globalization
Marta Ajmar
7.7 France and the Enlightenment Mediterranean
Christopher Drew Armstrong
Section 8: Southeast Asia
8.1 Globalizing Early Southeast Asia
Miriam T. Stark
8.2 How Rice Failed to Unify Asia: Globalization and Regionalism
of Early Farming Traditions in the Monsoon World
Dorian Q. Fuller, Cristina Cobo Castillo & Charlene Murphy
8.3 Globalization at the Dawn of History: the Emergence of
Global Cultures in the Mekong and Red River Deltas
Alison Kyra Carter & Nam C. Kim
8.4 TRACING MARITIME CONNECTIONS BETWEEN ISLAND SOUTHEAST ASIA
AND THE INDIAN OCEAN WORLD
Tom Hoogervorst
8.5 Globalizing Indian Religions and Southeast Asian Localisms:
Incentives for the Adoption of Buddhism and Brahmanism in First
Millennium CE Southeast Asia
Stephen A. Murphy & Leedom Lefferts
8.6 Globalization in Southeast Asia’s Early Age of Commerce:
Evidence from the Thirteenth Century CE Java Sea Shipwreck
Lisa C. Niziolek & Amanda Respess
8.7 Spheres of Ceramic Exchange in Southeast Asia, Ninth to
Sixteenth Centuries CE
John N. Miksic & Goh Geok Yian
Section 9: West Asia
9.1 Globalizing Ideas in West Asian Material History
Tamar Hodos
9.2 Globalizing the Halaf
Olivier P. Nieuwenhuyse
9.3 Connectivity and Globalization in the Bronze Age of
Anatolia
Naoíse Mac Sweeney
9.4 Globalization and the Study of the Achaemenid Persian
Empire
Henry P. Colburn
9.5 Lapis Lazuli, Homer and the Buddha: Material and Ideological
Exchange in West Asia (c. 250 BCE - 200 CE)
Rachel Mairs
9.6 The Global Ottomans
Joanita Vroom
9.7 Pre-modern Globalization and the Rediscovery of Iranian
Antiquity
Daniel T. Potts
Section 10: Conclusion
10.1 Long Histories of Globalization
Jan Nederveen Pieterse
Tamar Hodos is Reader in Mediterranean Archaeology in the Department of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of Bristol.
"Refreshingly, the book forgoes the type of synthetic narratives usually associated with archaeological handbooks, instead presenting a series of vignettes, many of which represent fresh engagements of burgeoning theoretical concepts with lesser-known geographic arenas. (…) For readers not deeply entrenched in globalisation frameworks, the chapters at the bookends provide excellent introductions and reflections on the subject of what is and is not globalisation." – Current World Archaeology"Tamar Hodos, Reader in Mediterranean Archaeology at the University of Bristol, has assembled a fascinating and unique work in the Routledge Handbook of Archaeology and Globalization. Usually considered a modern-era phenomenon, Hodos and her collaborators demonstrate that globalization has been with us since complex ancient societies first developed." - Reference & User Services Quarterly
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