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Island Rhythms: The Web of Social Relationships and Interaction Networks in the Lesser Antillean Archipelago between 400 B.C. and A.D. 1492
by
Boomert, Arie
, Knippenberg, Sebastiaan
, Bright, Alistair J.
, Hofman, Corinne L.
in
Antiquities
/ Archaeological sites
/ Art pottery
/ Ceramic materials
/ Crocks
/ Ethnography
/ Ethnology
/ Intercultural communication
/ Native Americans
/ Paleoanthropology
/ Pottery
/ Precolumbian era
/ Prestige
/ Social exchange
/ Social interaction
/ Social structure
/ Stone
2007
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Island Rhythms: The Web of Social Relationships and Interaction Networks in the Lesser Antillean Archipelago between 400 B.C. and A.D. 1492
by
Boomert, Arie
, Knippenberg, Sebastiaan
, Bright, Alistair J.
, Hofman, Corinne L.
in
Antiquities
/ Archaeological sites
/ Art pottery
/ Ceramic materials
/ Crocks
/ Ethnography
/ Ethnology
/ Intercultural communication
/ Native Americans
/ Paleoanthropology
/ Pottery
/ Precolumbian era
/ Prestige
/ Social exchange
/ Social interaction
/ Social structure
/ Stone
2007
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Island Rhythms: The Web of Social Relationships and Interaction Networks in the Lesser Antillean Archipelago between 400 B.C. and A.D. 1492
by
Boomert, Arie
, Knippenberg, Sebastiaan
, Bright, Alistair J.
, Hofman, Corinne L.
in
Antiquities
/ Archaeological sites
/ Art pottery
/ Ceramic materials
/ Crocks
/ Ethnography
/ Ethnology
/ Intercultural communication
/ Native Americans
/ Paleoanthropology
/ Pottery
/ Precolumbian era
/ Prestige
/ Social exchange
/ Social interaction
/ Social structure
/ Stone
2007
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Island Rhythms: The Web of Social Relationships and Interaction Networks in the Lesser Antillean Archipelago between 400 B.C. and A.D. 1492
Journal Article
Island Rhythms: The Web of Social Relationships and Interaction Networks in the Lesser Antillean Archipelago between 400 B.C. and A.D. 1492
2007
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Overview
The precolonial communities of the Caribbean archipelago were not insular. The discontinuous natural resource distribution, the maritime orientation of the Caribbean Amerindians, and the complexities of regional social interaction ensured that the precolonial Caribbean islandscape was dynamic and highly interconnected. This report explores the socicultural behavior and intercommunity exchange relationships of the inhabitants of the Lesser Antilles. It combines related archaeological case studies encompassing the procurement and exchange of: (1) raw materials and utilitarian goods with a wide spatial and social distribution, (2) goods with high stylistic visibility and presumed social function as markers of identity or status, and (3) prestige goods with profound ceremonial value. The study of these objects reveals overarching social and ideological dimensions to Caribbean life. Data suggest that social relationships manifest themselves at different levels and through distinct rhythms while taking on various material guises during the Ceramic age Amerindian occupation of the Caribbean islands (400 B.C. to A.D. 1492). While there is great potential in unraveling interaction networks through the careful study of distribution patterns, the incorporation of ethnohistoric and ethnographic information is imperative to elucidate the web of social relationships underlying these material manifestations.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press,Society for American Archaeology
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