Archaeology cannot find ethnicity "independently", but only with the help of written sources. The way one defines "ethnicity" is critical to ones' conclusions. Ethnic groups, as a type of imagined community, most likely existed already in prehistory; but without written sources, at least a collective name, we cannot fish them out. The article reviews a series of papers which try, in vain, to 'get' to ethnicity from material remains; and another series which tries, in vain, to prove (or refute) "Iron I Ethnic Israel". Bagira appears in a photo in the text.Peer reviewe
Introduction : Ethnicity, the End at Last ? At present, the notion of ethnicity plays a paradoxical ...
The author aimed to examine the core matter of the discussion, which has been going for a while in a...
The author poses the question as to whether or not it is possible to draw conclusions about the ethn...
Archaeology cannot find ethnicity "independently", but only with the help of written sources. The wa...
This article has two aims. The first is to show that the search for ethnicity in archaeology is depe...
This project examines the issue of social identity, particularly ethnicity, in the ancient world. I...
The study of ethnicity is a highly controversial area in contemporary archaeology. The identificatio...
This essay, concentrating on the Iron Age I period, looks at the possibility of seeing the early Isr...
In this article a comparative study is presented of the Indian and the Ethiopian Jews in Israel, i...
For a long time, the central focus of anthropology has been on the study of the so-called traditiona...
grantor: University of TorontoThe purpose of this interdisciplinary work is to examine exp...
International audienceThe concept of ethnogenesis, created by R. Wenskus and developed by his heirs ...
As developed in the fields of anthropology and sociology, the concept of ethnicity offers one possib...
It is often claimed that the mortuary traditions that appeared in lowland Britain in the fifth centu...
From the perspective of social anthropology, this paper examines the collection and analysis of cens...
Introduction : Ethnicity, the End at Last ? At present, the notion of ethnicity plays a paradoxical ...
The author aimed to examine the core matter of the discussion, which has been going for a while in a...
The author poses the question as to whether or not it is possible to draw conclusions about the ethn...
Archaeology cannot find ethnicity "independently", but only with the help of written sources. The wa...
This article has two aims. The first is to show that the search for ethnicity in archaeology is depe...
This project examines the issue of social identity, particularly ethnicity, in the ancient world. I...
The study of ethnicity is a highly controversial area in contemporary archaeology. The identificatio...
This essay, concentrating on the Iron Age I period, looks at the possibility of seeing the early Isr...
In this article a comparative study is presented of the Indian and the Ethiopian Jews in Israel, i...
For a long time, the central focus of anthropology has been on the study of the so-called traditiona...
grantor: University of TorontoThe purpose of this interdisciplinary work is to examine exp...
International audienceThe concept of ethnogenesis, created by R. Wenskus and developed by his heirs ...
As developed in the fields of anthropology and sociology, the concept of ethnicity offers one possib...
It is often claimed that the mortuary traditions that appeared in lowland Britain in the fifth centu...
From the perspective of social anthropology, this paper examines the collection and analysis of cens...
Introduction : Ethnicity, the End at Last ? At present, the notion of ethnicity plays a paradoxical ...
The author aimed to examine the core matter of the discussion, which has been going for a while in a...
The author poses the question as to whether or not it is possible to draw conclusions about the ethn...