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CHAPTER 19 Ethnicity: Theoretical Approaches, Methodological Implications Siân Jones Concepts of race and ethnicity have played an important role in the production of archaeological knowledge throughout the history of the discipline. One of the first questions that antiquarians and archaeologists ask of the physical remains that they deal with is, Who was responsible for these material remains? The answers have almost always been sought in terms of named groups of people, such as the Beaker folk and the Celts of Europe, the Israelites and the Philistines of the Near East, and the Dorset people and Pueblo Indians of North America. Embedded in these attributions are ideas about the nature of the groups concerned. Here, the concepts of race and ethnicity have taken center stage, alongside the related concepts of culture, nation, and tribe. Yet despite their apparently straightforward role in the initial naming and classification of archaeological remains, race and ethnicity have a checkered history within the discipline. Their complex and overlapping meanings and uses have changed dramatically over time, as have the different theories surrounding them. They have also been implicated in some of the major epistemological shifts within the discipline. Finally, archaeological interpretations of race and ethnicity have been intricately bound up with the construction of modern ethnic, national, and racial identities, adding greater weight and urgency to the development of critical approaches to these concepts within the discipline. In this chapter I intend to dissect the concepts, theories, and methods surrounding the identification of past human groups from archaeological remains. In doing so I will examine other concepts in addition to ethnic group and ethnicity, in particular race and culture, because different concepts have been favored at different times in the history of the discipline. The main theoretical and methodological developments informing the identification of past groups of people throughout the history of archaeology will be discussed. Recent approaches to the archaeological study of ethnic or cultural identity will then be outlined, highlighting the main debates and developments. The contemporary social and political dimensions of studying ethnicity in archaeology will then be explored, and some future directions will be highlighted in the concluding section. Like many disciplines in the human sciences, archaeology was dominated until at least the mid-twentieth century by an empiricist agenda intent on mapping the temporal and geographical distribution of cultures and their corresponding ethnic groups.1 Within this empiricist tradition there has been little discussion of the nature of ethnic groups, or the relationship between ethnicity and cultural difference. Ethnic groups were simply assumed to represent bounded, homogeneous entities that can be objectively defined on the basis of cultural, linguistic, and sometimes biological characteristics. Their very existence was taken as a given, part of the natural order of things, which provided an obvious focus for the classification and interpretation of archaeological remains. However, far from being part of a self-evident natural order, the particular modes of classifying human diversity that prevailed within empiricist archaeology can be traced back to the nineteenth century, where they have their origins in the study of racial difference. RACE, CULTURE, AND LANGUAGE During the nineteenth century, the study of archaeological remains became bound up in the task of defining the “races” of humanity. A complex range of theories and definitions developed over this time, but a number of general trends can be observed. Race was thought to be the primary basis of human differentiation. Other concepts, later associated with very different forms of group organization and identity, such as nation, ethnic group, and tribe, were all heavily attributed to race, and consequently often used interchangeably. Races were regarded as discrete objective entities, each possessing its own unique character. Typology was the dominant mode of research, and scholars devoted much of their time to identifying and describing different racial types on the basis of empirical criteria. 321 Physical and anatomical features were given a primary role in the definition of races, but language, psychology, and cultural and intellectual ability were also seen as important. Racial determinism was widespread and, to greater or lesser degrees, racial theories posited a direct relationship between biological and cultural capabilities (Stepan 1982). Physical features such as cranial shape and size were assumed to determine cultural and intellectual ability. Research was also devoted to explaining the origins of different races. During the early and middle nineteenth century theories of race were dominated by the debate between monogenists and polygenists, the former arguing that the different races of humanity had a common origin and the latter that they had different origins. During the later nineteenth century, the gradual acceptance of Darwin’s theory of evolution rendered the debate obsolete, but as Stocking (1968) has revealed, the polygenist emphasis on the fixity and longevity of racial types persisted until the end of the nineteenth and into the early decades of the twentieth century. Furthermore, evolutionary theory provided a framework for the hierarchical arrangement of “higher” and “lower” races. For more detailed historiographical studies of nineteenth century theories of race, see George Stocking’s Race, Culture, and Evolution (1968), Michael Banton’s The Idea of Race (1977), and I. Hannaford’s Race: The History of an Idea in the West (1996). Archaeological research played an important role in the development of racial typologies and in historical and evolutionary theories of race. Likewise, theories of race had an important impact on the development of archaeological theory and method. Human remains from archaeological sites provided evidence for the definition of racial types on the basis of metric analyses of skeletal components. In Europe, the most common mode of racial classification was based on measurements of the shape and size of the skull, and the distinction based on the cephalic index between the dolichocephalic (long-headed) northern races and the brachycephalic (round-headed) southern races was to become particularly significant in debates about European prehistory (Stepan 1982:97–99). Human skeletal remains were particularly important sources of evidence in debates concerning the longevity of specific races and disputes concerning the permanence or fluidity of racial traits and groups. Archaeologists often attributed racial categories to specific archaeological cultures by making direct associations between material culture and skeletal ma322 s iâ n j on es terial. However, the widespread claim that cultural capabilities were directly tied to racial heritage meant that archaeologists could apply racial attributions to their evidence even in the absence of skeletal remains. During the late nineteenth century, broad similarities in forms of technology, subsistence, architecture, and art were used as a means of distinguishing the socalled lower races from the higher races according to an evolutionary scale ranging from savagery through barbarism to civilization. With little concern for the history of particular racial groups, these archaeologists were trying to establish a universal history of race through the comparative study of both ethnographic and archaeological material culture. Good examples of such an approach can be found in the work of General Augustus Lane-Fox Pitt-Rivers, The Evolution of Culture (1906); and John Lubbock, Pre-Historic Times (1865). By the early twentieth century, the emphasis in both archaeological and anthropological research shifted away from an overarching concern with social evolution toward the particularistic histories of specific racial groups and their diffusion. Strong resemblances between material culture assemblages were regarded as de facto evidence for a shared racial heritage, or, as it was often phrased, “affinity of blood.” One of the forerunners of this approach in Europe was the German scholar Gustaf Kossinna, who developed and applied the method of settlement archaeology ( Kossinna 1911). In order to trace the history of present-day racial groups, Kossinna argued that the historically attested settlement of a specific group could be traced back into prehistory through continuity of material culture. Historical linguistics also provided an important source of evidence, as race, language, and culture were assumed to be closely interrelated and coeval with one another. On the basis of his settlement archaeology, Kossinna claimed that it was possible to identify major prehistoric racial groups, such as the Aryans and the Slavs, and to trace their relationships through time. As exemplified in his book The Aryans (1926), Gordon Childe, although of very different political persuasion, had adopted similar concepts and methodology. Despite the variety of different theoretical approaches that framed the study of human groups during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, one similarity was the routine conflation of race, language, and culture. Furthermore, while race arguably provided the dominant mode for understanding human difference at this time, many scholars used terms such as “tribe,” “ethnic group,” “nation,” and “people” inter- changeably with “race.” Consider William Greenwell’s (1905:306–307) interpretation of two late Iron Age burials in Yorkshire: The two cemeteries may be treated as one, for though there are some differences between the articles discovered in the graves at the two sites, there is so much in common in their principal and more important features, that they must be regarded as the burial places of people whose habits and manner of life were similar . . . The first question which arises is that of the race or tribe who were buried at Danes Graves and Arras, and to what division of the human family they belonged. In respect to this question, Greenwell argued that the “most essential, and perhaps the principal factor is the physical characteristics of the skeletons themselves.” He admitted that the site of Arras lacked good skeletal evidence, with only two skulls surviving. Nevertheless, he stated, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, where such things as grave relics “are found to be similar in two districts, the presumption is strong that they were in the main occupied by people who were united by affinity of blood” (Greenwell 1905:307, my emphasis). The conflation of race, language, and culture in the study of archaeological remains can be confirmed by a glance though archaeological journals of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Race was everywhere, whether in identifying the great research problems of the discipline in anniversary address of the Society of Antiquaries (Lindsay 1922), or in the routine application of racial classifications to skeletal remains (Austin 1928), or through the analysis of racial forms from Sumerian figurines (Langdon 1921). For recent overviews, see K. Sklenár, Archaeology in Central Europe (1983); Bruce Trigger, A History of Archaeological Thought (1989); and Siân Jones, The Archaeology of Ethnicity (1997). THE POLITICS OF RACE Racial typologies and classifications pervaded the nineteenth century and first few decades of the twentieth century, penetrating many aspects of social life and informing ideological and political debates. The idea that the physiological characteristics of particular races determined cultural and intellectual ability, allied with evolutionary theories, provided a convenient way to justify slavery and colonialism, by placing indigenous inhabitants lower down on the evolutionary ladder and European “civilization” at the top. To maintain this idealized evolutionary racial hierarchy, archaeologists went to great lengths to attribute sites and assemblages which appeared to be too “sophisticated” for the supposedly backward non-European races, to migrating races of European or Near Eastern origin, despite evidence to the contrary. See Peter Garlake’s book on Great Zimbabwe (1973) for discussion of a classic example. Further case studies are provided by contributions to a number of books in the One World Archaeology Series, in particular Archaeological Approaches to Cultural Identity (Shennan 1989a); and Social Construction of the Past: Representation as Power (Bond and Gilliam 1994). The concept of race played an equally important role in European politics of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Nations were conceived of in racial terms and states justified their actions toward one another and their own populations on the basis of racial theory (Stepan 1982). Archaeological evidence was employed in competition between nation-states as to whose racial pedigree was superior and which nations had played a decisive role in the development of European civilization. The Nazi regime used the work of archaeologists, including Gustaf Kossinna, to support its misplaced claims about the superiority of the “Germanic race” over other constructed racial groups, such as the Jews and the Slavs, contributing to the ideological apparatus which supported the destruction of millions of the European Jewry in the Holocaust (Arnold 1990; MacCann 1990). The work of German archaeologists concerning the distribution of Germanic settlement in prehistory was also used to justify German claims to parts of Poland after World War I and during World War II (Arnold 1990; Wijwarra 1996). Other European nations also employed archaeological evidence in support of racial theories used to legitimate their relationships with others. The English, for instance, used archaeological evidence to emphasize their Roman and Anglo-Saxon heritage and to justify their superiority over the Welsh, Scots, and Irish, all considered racially inferior (Hingley 2000). CULTURE HISTORY AND TYPOLOGY The political importance of race in contemporary society partly explains its persistence as a concept in the humanities and social sciences, including archaeology, until the 1920s and 1930s. However, the politics of race also contributed to its demise within the social sciences due to abhorrence at the contemporary institutions and practices that it was associated with. Although there were sporadic critiques of the concept of Ethnicity: Theoretical Approaches, Methodological Implications 323 race and the theories surrounding it in earlier decades, racial typology and racial determinism were widely challenged between the 1930s and 1950s (Huxley and Haddon 1935; UNESCO 1950). In particular the correlation of cultural and physical groupings and the assumed racial determination of mental, cultural, and linguistic capabilities were questioned. Archaeologists contributed to such debates; Grafton Elliott Smith was a member of the Royal Anthropological Institute’s Race and Culture Committee in 1933, when the appropriateness of the concept of race for archaeological analysis started to be questioned. In an article entitled “Races, Peoples, and Cultures in Prehistoric Europe,” Childe (1933:198; see also 1935) argued that any confusion between sociological and linguistic similarity and physiological similarity should be studiously avoided. “Culture need not correspond to a group allied by physical traits acquired by heredity. Culture is a social heritage; it corresponds to a community sharing common traditions, common institutions and a common way of life. Such a group may reasonably be called a people.” Childe (1935:199) then went on to argue that the material culture of past societies should be able to identify past peoples or ethnic groups, but not races, and therefore that “prehistoric archaeology has a good hope of establishing an ethnic history of Europe, while a racial one seems hopelessly remote.” Although influenced by recent developments in the science of genetics, such arguments were also specifically designed to counter the political use of archaeology in support of racial inequality in the present. So, for instance, Childe’s critique was directed at attempts to correlate the Indo-European culture and language group with the Nordic race. “Confusions between race and language persist only in the minds of the most superficial journalists and bigoted politicians” (Childe 1933:200). This concern to distinguish race from ethnic and cultural forms of differentiation was heightened following World War II and outrage at the political appropriation of the past under the Third Reich. As Ian Hodder (1991a:x) pointed out in his review of European archaeological theory, “Few archaeologists in Europe can work without the shadow of the misuse of the past for nationalistic purposes during the Third Reich.” In the immediate aftermath of World War II, overt ethnic interpretations of archaeological remains were rejected due to the traditional conflation of ethnic groups with races. German archaeologists retreated into a descriptive, empiricist approach with little reference to peoples such as the “Germani” or the “IndoEuropeans” (Härke 1995:56; Veit 1989:42). However, a 324 s iâ n j on es strong empiricist tradition focusing on the identification of archaeological culture areas had already come to dominate the practice of archaeology. For instance, by the 1920s the archaeological literature in Britain was littered with references to cultures, such as the Dorian culture (Casson 1921) and the Halstatt culture (Fox 1923:85). Furthermore, explicit statements about the basis for such reconstructions of the past, although few in number, reveal that the underlying epistemology was not far removed from that of Kossinna and others concerned with the identification of past races. So, for example, the British archaeologist O. G. S. Crawford stated that “culture may be defined as the sum of all the ideals and activities and material which characterise a group of human beings. It is to a community what character is to an individual” (Crawford 1921:79, my emphasis). Archaeologists, he stated, should aim to discover “homogeneous cultures” through the analysis of a broad range of types and their distribution in space and time (Crawford 1921:132). By the mid-twentieth century, the definition of culture areas had become the principal means by which prehistory was delineated in space and time, expressed in maps, tables, and charts as a mosaic of discrete, homogeneous peoples and cultures (Hawkes 1940: map 4; table 4). The only real distinction with earlier approaches was that the concept of race, and any attempt to correlate cultural and racial categories (i.e., those based on physical/anatomical features), became increasingly rare in the archaeological literature. As Veit (1989:42) has pointed out, the “archaeological culture” became “a quasi-ideology free substitute” for the terms “race” and “ethnic unit” yet still implied that people lurked behind such archaeological groupings. Thus the same basic paradigm that was used politically within Nazi Germany, only without explicit reference to past peoples or races, also came to form the rudimentary framework for a worldwide empiricist archaeology dominated by classification and typology. As with all empiricist traditions, what was lacking was any critique of the underlying categories and assumptions which framed culture-historical archaeology (for a notable exception, see Tallgren 1937). For the most part, it is assumed that the classificatory concepts employed are derived from the object of study. So, for instance, it has often been argued that the culture-historical approach in archaeology (see Webster, chapter 2) is a product of the need to establish a system for classifying the spatial and temporal variation evident in the archaeological record (Trigger 1978:86; Paddayya 1995:139). The implication is that culture history involves the description and classification of variation in material remains without reference to preconceived concepts or theory. Clearly it cannot be denied that human ways of life vary in space and time and that this variation is frequently manifested in some form or another in material culture. However, the particular classificatory framework developed in archaeology in order to deal with such variation was, and still is, based on certain assumptions about the nature of cultural diversity. The dominance of the culture concept in twentieth-century archaeology reflects an important shift away from the racial classifications of human diversity. Nevertheless, the normative concept of culture (see Webster, chapter 2) that replaced race carried over many assumptions that were central to nineteenthcentury ideas, in particular an overriding concern with holism, homogeneity, order, and boundedness. Normative theories of culture are based on the idea that within a given group cultural practices and beliefs tend to conform to prescriptive ideational norms or rules of behavior. These norms are maintained by regular interaction within the group, and the transmission of shared cultural norms to subsequent generations through the process of socialization, which purportedly results in a continuous, homogeneous cultural tradition. Childe (1956:8) was explicit about this process, arguing that “generation after generation has followed society’s prescription and produced and reproduced in thousands of instances the socially approved standard type.” An archaeological type is just that. A culture, comprised of a set of distinctive norms, was regarded as the product of a particular society, or ethnic group, and at the same time assumed to provide the distinguishing characteristics of that group. Within an archaeological framework such ideas led to the assumption of a fixed and one-to-one relationship between material types and particular ethnic groups. Furthermore, it enabled archaeologists to identify past peoples or ethnic groups through the identification of (material) cultural traits, which was assumed to be an objective mode of inquiry. Gradual changes in these traits were attributed to internal drift in the prescribed cultural norms of a particular group, whereas sudden large-scale changes were explained in terms of external influences, such as diffusion resulting from culture contact, or the succession of one cultural group by another as a result of migration and conquest: “Distributional changes [in diagnostic types] should reflect displacements of population, the expansions, migrations, colonizations or conquests with which literary history is familiar” (Childe 1956:135). These ideas provided the underlying framework for the reconstruction of culture history, but they were soon to be challenged within archaeology as elsewhere in the human sciences. For readers who wish to find out more about culture history, see chapter 2 in this volume, contributions to Hodder (1991b) for summaries of its place in European archaeological traditions, and contributions to Ucko (1995) for discussion of developments in other parts of the world. RECENT APPROACHES AND DEBATES Up until the 1960s, as the emphasis in social sciences became one of documenting cultural diversity empirically, anthropology, and archaeology underwent a concerted shift from the concept of race to that of culture. At this point, however, the parallels cease. Whereas anthropology continued its shift from culture to ethnicity in the 1960s, the direction of archaeological research changed altogether. Ethnic groups became a marginal area of research due to the demise of culture history as a dominant paradigm, at least in Anglo-American archaeology. This New Archaeology was stimulated by disillusionment with the descriptive, empiricist nature of traditional archaeological research (see Watson, chapter 3). While traditional archaeology had been largely satisfied with tracing what happened in prehistory in terms of cultures and their movements, archaeologists in the 1950s and 1960s became increasingly concerned with how and even why cultural change occurred in the past (Willey and Phillips 1958:5–6; Binford 1962). The normative concept of culture, which had dominated traditional archaeology, was overturned within New Archaeology. It was argued that culture constitutes an integrated system, made up of different functioning subsystems, and as a corollary archaeological remains must be regarded as the product of a variety of past processes, rather than simply a reflection of ideational norms (Binford 1962, 1965; Clarke 1978). Culture was conceptualized as an adaptive mechanism, and a number of functionalist-oriented ecological and neoevolutionary approaches were developed with the aim of analyzing various dimensions of past sociocultural systems. In particular, research focused on the application of predictive law-like models in the interpretation of technological and economic systems, but other dimensions of society such as ideology, political organization, and symbolism, also became distinct foci of analysis within the systemic approach (for a historical review, see Trigger 1989). Ethnicity: Theoretical Approaches, Methodological Implications 325 Thus descriptive historical reconstructions of past cultures and peoples were pushed into the background in the functionalist and processual analysis, with ethnic groups marginalized to a sterile position in traditional descriptive culture history, as reflected in the decline in explicit references to ethnic entities in the literature (Olsen and Kobylinski 1991:10). The main exception has been in the field of historical archaeology, where the existence of historical references to specific ethnic groups has resulted in the perpetuation of the ethnic labeling of sites and objects. Nevertheless, although recent archaeological studies have been committed to explaining settlement systems, trade networks, social ranking, political systems, and ideology, the traditional culture unit has survived as the basic unit of description and classification, inevitably shadowed by the implicit connotation of a corresponding social or ethnic group, even where such a correlation has been criticized. For instance, Bradley (1984:89, 94) makes frequent references to the Wessex culture, Renfrew (1972:187, 191; 1973:187) to the Phylokopi I culture and the Copper Age cultures of the Balkans, and Sherratt (1982:17) to the Szakálhát and Tisza cultures. For some (Binford 1965) the retention of a normative culture concept was justified, because, although functional aspects of material culture were no longer considered to be appropriate for the identification of cultures or ethnic groups, such information was still assumed to be held in nonfunctional stylistic traits. However, many people adopted a pragmatic position similar to Renfrew (1972; 1979; Hodson 1980), who argued that the archaeological culture and the typological method were still necessary for the basic description and classification of the “facts” prior to the process of explanation (Renfrew 1972:17): While the simple narration of events is not an explanation, it is a necessary preliminary. We are not obliged to reject Croce’s statement (quoted in Collingwood 1946, 192): “History has only one duty: to narrate the facts,” but simply to find it insufficient. The first, preliminary goal of an archaeological study must be to define the culture in question in space and time. Only when the culture has been identified, defined and described is there any hope of “taking it apart” to try to reach some understanding of how it came to have its own particular form. This statement reveals the distinction between empirical description and classification (where and when questions), and social explanation and interpretation 326 s iâ n j on es (how and why questions) that has been, and continues to be, intrinsic to a great deal of recent social/processual archaeology. Cultures and ethnic groups remain firmly located at the empirical descriptive level of archaeological research, while other aspects of society are seen as components making up a dynamic cultural system (Renfrew 1972). Recently, such a distinction between empirical description and explanation has been the focus of critiques by those influenced by poststructuralist theory (Hodder 1986; Shanks and Tilley 1992; Tilley 1991; see Shanks, chapter 9). Nevertheless, these do not, for the most part, reconsider the interpretation of group identity in archaeology, focusing instead largely on symbolic and ideological systems. However, at the same time as the New Archaeology had taken hold in archaeology, anthropological and sociological research was bringing about a sea change in our understanding of the relationship between culture and group identity and processes involved in the maintenance of group boundaries. During the 1950s and 1960s ethnographic fieldwork such as that by Leach (1954) among the Kachin and Shan in Highland Burma and Moerman (1965) among the Lue of northern Thailand highlighted the incongruity of cultural, linguistic, and political boundaries. Furthermore, the ethnic boundaries asserted by people in day-to-day life often could not be identified on the basis of objective discontinuities in language, culture, polity, and territory. Instead, ethnic boundaries appeared to be a product of interaction between groups and an opposition between us and them. Thus. In his study of the Lue people, Moerman found that the Lue shared many material and linguistic traits in common with their neighbors, and that the characteristics that they identified as Lue traits varied from one area to another. Yet his study revealed that identification as Lue in daily life was an important aspect of social organization. Moerman (1965:1216) concluded that “the Lue, at least, cannot be viewed in isolation if one is to define their ‘Lueness,’ identify them as a tribe, and understand how they survive in modern Thailand. . . . The Lue cannot be identified—cannot, in a sense, be said to exist—in isolation.” By the late 1960s and 1970s such ethnographic accounts were being drawn together in producing new theories of ethnicity and the processes involved in the maintenance of group identity (Barth 1969a; Cohen 1974; Glazer and Moynihan 1975). Many points were synthesized in Frederick Barth’s (1969b) seminal introduction to Ethnic Groups and Boundaries. Barth criticized the traditional equation of race = language = culture, arguing that there is rarely one-to-one correlation between boundaries in these different domains and that boundaries are a product of social interaction rather than social/geographic isolation. Ethnic identities, and the boundaries associated with them, should be seen as products of active social processes, involving the construction of an opposition between “us” and “them” on the basis of selective and subjective use of cultural and linguistic differences. Such processes are, he argued, embedded in economic and political relationships between groups and thus ethnic boundaries can be involved in the pursuit and maintenance of interests, giving them an instrumental dimension. Moreover, ethnic identity is fluid and flexible with changes in individual identity leading to a flow of personnel across ethnic boundaries (for example, see case studies by Haaland 1969, focusing on the Fur and Baggara of the Sudan, and Barth 1969c, focusing on the Pathans of Afghanistan and Pakistan). Many of these arguments are now part of mainstream theories of ethnicity in the social sciences. The instrumentalist position of Barth and others has been criticized leading to a reconsideration of the relationship between culture and ethnicity (Bentley 1987; Eriksen 1991). Nevertheless, ethnic identity is still regarded as the aspect of a person’s self-concept that results from identification with a broader group. In opposition to others, on the basis of perceived cultural differentiation and/or common descent (for overviews, see Eriksen 1993; Banks 1996). By the 1970s and 1980s, developments in social anthropology affected two main areas of archaeological research. The first consists of studies concerned with the relationship between material culture and ethnic symbolism. For instance, on the basis of ethnoarchaeological research in Baringo, Kenya, Hodder (1982) argued that there is rarely a one-to-one correlation between cultural similarities and differences and ethnic groups. He demonstrated that the kinds of material culture involved in ethnic symbolism can vary between different groups, and that the expression of ethnic boundaries may involve a limited range of material culture, while other material forms and styles may be shared across group boundaries. Others studies include R. Haaland’s (1977) research on Sudanese Nubia, A. Praetzellis et al.’s (1987) examination of Chinese American identity, and R. Larick’s (1986, 1991) analysis of Loikop (Sanbura) spears. The second main area of research concerned the role of ethnicity in the structuring of economic and political relationships. Thus, for instance, Hodder (see Blackmore et al. 1979) also showed how the maintenance of ethnic boundaries in the Baringo district related to modes of subsistence and control over resources. Drawing on this ethnoarchaeological research, he and others attempted to examine of similar processes in Late Iron Age Britain. A rather different example is provided by Brumfiel’s (1994) analysis of ethnicity in the Aztec state. State representations of identity, she argues, were fashioned to suit the needs of particular political factions. The Aztecs sought to override particularistic ethnic identities within regional elites, but at the same time promoted derogatory ethnic stereotypes which served to reinforce the superiority of the civil state culture. While focusing on ethnicity as an active social process rather than a passive reflection of shared cultural norms, such approaches perpetuate the idea of ethnic groups as discrete, coherent wholes. This emphasis on wholes is amply demonstrated by the prevalence of terms such as “group” and “boundary,” which imply the existence of distinct entities (cf. R. Cohen 1978:386, with relation to anthropology). In the past decade, however, a few archaeologists have started to challenge the very existence of ethnic groups in the form of bounded, monolithic, territorially based entities (Shennan 1989b; Thomas 1996; R. Jones 1997, 2002; S. Jones 1997). Instead, it is argued that the construction of ethnicity (and cultural identity in general) is a situational and dynamic process that can take diverse forms in different contexts of social interaction. The material world is used for identity construction as well as the communication of similarity and difference which ethnicity inevitably entails. Thus, from an archaeological perspective, it cannot be assumed that there is any fixed relationship between particular material types and particular identities. Rather than neat, coherent cultural entities, the resulting pattern is more likely to be a complex web of overlapping styles of material culture relating to changeable expression of ethnicity in different social contexts. Such an approach has important implications, both for the interpretation of ethnicity in archaeology, as well as the underlying classification of archaeological evidence, relying as it does on normative conceptions of culture (for case studies, see Jones and Richards 2000; Wells 1998; Thomas 1996; A. Jones 1998, 2002). Studies focusing on the discourses involved in the construction of identity, and particularly the role of myth and tradition, are also proving productive, for instance see Jonathan Hall’s study of Ethnic Identity in Greek Antiquity (1997). Ethnicity: Theoretical Approaches, Methodological Implications 327 Considered together, the developments which have taken place in archaeology over the last three decades have overturned a number of the assumptions central to traditional culture history: (1) the idea that that a one-to-one relationship persists between cultures and ethnic groups; (2) the existence of discrete, homogeneous cultures; and (3) the idea that group identities relate to distinct, territorially based social entities. However, studies focusing on ethnicity are still sporadic and tend to be confined to specific, isolated case studies. Consequently, ethnicity, as well as the relationship between cultures and ethnic groups, remains a problematic area of archaeological analysis. On the one hand, the identification of ethnic groups is based on implicit assumptions inherited from traditional archaeology, and located in the domain of the supposedly pretheoretical description of the empirical evidence. On the other, ethnicity has been elevated, in a few instances, to the status of social process, subject to archaeological explanation. An artificial dichotomy between empirical description and social interpretation persists in a great deal of archaeological research and the position attributed to ethnicity within this dichotomy is ambivalent. THE PRESENT PAST: THE POLITICS OF ETHNICITY Of all the recent developments relating to ethnicity in archaeology, perhaps the most significant in terms of its impact on the discipline as a whole is the recent concern with the role of archaeology in the construction and legitimation of modern identities. The 1980s and 1990s witnessed an increasing body of conferences and publications dealing with the sociopolitics of archaeology in general, and specifically with the ways in which archaeology intersects with the construction of identities in the present (for recent examples, see Atkinson et al. 1996; Díaz-Andreu and Champion 1996; Graves-Brown et al. 1996). As I have already indicated, early attempts to equate archaeological remains with specific races were tied up with the politics of empire and the legitimation of social inequality between different so-called races in the present. Now a much broader critique has emerged dominated by a concern to expose the effects of nationalist interests on the discipline. This is epitomized by the definition of “nationalist archaeology” as a specific type of archaeology by Trigger (1984:385), a prominent historian of the discipline. Furthermore, numerous case studies have emerged documenting, for instance, how Gallic resistance to the Roman Empire played a key role in the construction of French national consciousness 328 s iâ n j on es (Dietler 1994; Fleury-Ilett 1996) or how archaeology has been actively used to support a direct genealogical relationship between the modern state of Israel and the ancient Israelites, and hence to legitimate Israeli territorial claims (Glock 1994; Whitelam 1996). It has also been shown that nationalism has had a more profound effect on the discipline through the very concepts of culture and identity which are employed (Díaz-Andreu 1996; S. Jones 1996). As Handler (1988:8) points out, “Nationalist ideologies and social scientific inquiry developed in the same historical context—that of the post-Renaissance European world—and . . . the two have reacted upon one another from their beginnings.” Nations, he argues, are considered “individuated beings.” Endowed with the reality of natural things, they are assumed to be bounded, continuous, and precisely distinguishable from other analogous entities (Handler 1988:6, 15). The idea of culture is intricately enmeshed with nationalist discourse; it is culture which distinguishes between nations and which constitutes the content of national identity. Moreover, “culture symbolises individuated existence: the assertion of cultural particularity is another way of proclaiming the existence of a unique collectivity” (Handler 1988:39). There are striking similarities between the representation of culture in nationalist discourses and the academic concepts of culture and society, which are regarded as bounded, homogeneous entities, occupying exclusive spatio-temporal positions (Clifford 1988; Handler 1988). The concept of an archaeological culture represents a particular variant of this formula. As discussed above, bounded material culture complexes are assumed to be the material manifestation of past peoples, who shared a set of prescriptive learned norms of behavior. Archaeological cultures came to be regarded as organic, individuated entities, the prehistorian’s substitute for the individual agents which make up the historian’s repertoire: “prehistory can recognize peoples and marshal them on the stage to take the place of the personal actors who form the historian’s troupe.” (Childe 1940:2; see also Piggott 1965:7). Moreover, as in the case of contemporary claims concerning the relationship between nations and cultures, the relationship between archaeological cultures and past peoples is based on teleological reasoning in that culture is both representative of, and constitutive of, the nation or people concerned: “the almost a priori belief in the existence of the culture follows inevitably from the belief that a particular human group . . . exists. The existence of the group is in turn predicated on the existence of a particular culture” (Handler 1988:39). The problem is that such an approach to the past has enabled history, place, and people to be tied together in the exclusive and monolithic fashion reinforcing essentialist representations of ethnic and national identity in the present. Furthermore, the definition of ethnic or tribal groups on the basis of the culture concept has traditionally invoked an inventory of cultural, linguistic, and material traits. As Devalle (1992:234) indicates, “The resulting picture has been one of people with a ‘museum culture,’ uprooted from the deep historical field, devoid of dynamism and meaning.” The consequences of such an approach are also manifest beyond academia. In political policy, administrative practice, legislation, heritage management, and education, in preserving the site of Great Zimbabwe, for instance, only one particular architectural phase in the highly complex past of the monument is being reconstructed, which reifies the monument as part of the national heritage and denies contemporary, heterogeneous beliefs and practices associated with the monument (Ucko 1994:271). Many other examples abound, ranging from Stonehenge (Bender 1993:269– 270; 1998) to Australian Aboriginal rock art (Ucko 1983:33–36), where reconstruction or conservation has resulted in the reification of particular, supposedly “authentic,” moments in the history of particular sites or material remains, and their extrapolation from ongoing social life. In such contexts archaeology has often been used to provide a static set of reference points where previously there was negotiation and dynamism. Through its concept of homogeneous archaeological cultures, traditional culture-historical archaeology has objectified culture by reconstructing a coherent linear narrative measured in terms of objectified events, such as contacts, migrations and conquests, with intervals of homogeneous, empty time in between them. This approach is particularly suited to the construction of national traditions, which as Devalle (1992:21) points out, is “concerned with establishing a legitimating continuity with the past, not with understanding historical discontinuities and the evolution of social contradictions.” Recent research into gene distributions adds a further dimension to debates about archaeology and politics. Attempts to correlate zones of genetic change with cultural linguistic and ethnic boundaries (Cavelli-Sforza et al. 1994; Sokal et al. 1993) have stimulated much discussion about the methodologi- cal validity and the political implications of such research (Mirza and Dungworth 1995; Pluciennik 1995; Terrell and Stewart 1996). As Evison (1996) points out, comparing genetic diversity to social and cultural diversity is worthy of study. However, existing work does not adequately address the problems of delimiting ethnic, cultural and linguistic boundaries, and instead revives the traditional culture = people model taking archaeological cultures as evidence for past ethnic groups (Plucienik 1995). The problems of such an approach to the archaeological evidence, which fails to take into account the transitory and fluid nature of ethnic identity, have been discussed above. Furthermore, as Pluciennik (1995) and Mirza and Dungworth (1995) point out, it is essential that the political ramifications of such research be subject to widespread debate. Certainly claims that genetic relationships of European populations reflect their ethnohistorical affinities (Sokal et al. 1993) are likely to be used to provide an additional dimension of biological concreteness to contemporary politicized claims regarding ethnohistorical continuity, whatever the intentions of the authors. CONCLUSION Recent research focusing on ethnicity in archaeology has overturned many traditional assumptions about the discrete, bounded and homogeneous nature of cultures, and the straightforward link between culture and identity central to culture historical archaeology. However, there is a pressing need for further research, not least because of the contemporary political and ethical issues raised by archaeological studies of culture and ethnicity. Clearly, traditional approaches to race and ethnicity in archaeology have enabled history, place, and people to be tied together in an exclusive and monolithic fashion, reinforcing essentialist representations of ethnic and national identity in the present. The challenge for archaeologists is twofold. First, we need to recognize the relationship between present constructions of group identity and our interpretations of the past. Second, rather than abandon the study of ethnicity and identity, we need to pursue more sophisticated analytical and interpretive approaches to avoid imposing essentialist perspectives on the past. The research terrain is changing rapidly, producing new questions and approaches to group identity quite distinct from the traditional preoccupation with cultures or stylistic zones and boundaries. I will conclude by highlighting some of those that, in my opinion, Ethnicity: Theoretical Approaches, Methodological Implications 329 represent exciting and productive avenues for future research. Science-based analysis of material culture has immense potential to provide insights into the wide variety of practices involved in the production, use, and consumption of artifacts (A. Jones 2002). For instance, thin-sectioning and residue analysis of the pottery from the Neolithic settlement of Barnhouse has enabled the identification of multiple levels of differentiation within the village, at the village level beyond, which would have informed the recognition and expression of identities in different contexts at different times (A. Jones 2002:chaps. 6–7; Richards, in press). Practice-based and phenomenological approaches that explore the ways in which past identities are created through engagement with architecture and landscape are also proving particularly productive (A. Jones 1998; Richards, in press; Tilley 1994). Furthermore, studies focusing on the ways in which the social lives of objects and monuments are tied up in the creation of identities and the legitimation of power in the past enable exploration of the role of the past in the past, as well as in the present (Thomas 1996: chap. 6; Hingley 1996). Within historical archaeology exciting work is being carried out into relationship between group identities and the negotiation of power in colonial contexts (Funari 1998; Mattingly 1997; Orser 1996, 1998; Webster 2001; Weik 1997). Finally, studies of how specific monuments and landscapes are involved in the production of multiple identities are providing more in-depth and subtle understandings of the relationship between archaeology, ethnicity/nationalism, and other forms of identity in the modern world (Bender 1998; Bender and Winer 2001). ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I would like to thank the editors for inviting me to contribute to this volume and Colin Richards for his comments on a draft version of this chapter. NOTE 1. Empiricism is the system which accepts only knowledge based on direct experience. REFERENCES Arnold, Bettina. 1990. The past as propaganda: Totalitarian archaeology in Nazi Germany. Antiquity 64: 464–478. Atkinson, John A., Iain Banks, and Jerry O’Sullivan (eds.). 1996. 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