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The Archaeology of Southern Africa

The Archaeology of Southern Africa

The Archaeology of Southern Africa

2nd Edition
Peter Mitchell, St. Hugh's College, Oxford University
June 2024
Hardback
9781009324731

    Some of humanity's earliest ancestors lived in southern Africa and evidence from sites there has inspired key debates on human origins and the emergence of complex cognition. Building on its rich rock art heritage, archaeologists have developed theoretical work that continues to influence rock art studies worldwide, with the relationship between archaeological and anthropological data central to understanding past hunter-gatherer, pastoralist, and farmer communities alike. New work on pre-colonial states contests models that previously explained their emergence via external trade, while the transformations wrought by European colonialism are being rewritten to emphasise Indigenous agency, feeding into efforts to decolonise the discipline itself. Inhabited by humans longer than almost anywhere else and with an unusually varied, complex past, southern Africa thus has much to contribute to archaeology worldwide. In this revised and updated edition, Peter Mitchell provides a comprehensive and extensively illustrated synthesis of its archaeology over more than three million years.

    • Covers the entirety of Southern Africa's archaeological record from the earliest hominins to present-day disciplinary practice
    • Situates Southern African archaeology within wider global debates, illustrating how Southern Africa's past can contribute to broader questions of global relevance
    • Includes an extensive illustration program

    Product details

    June 2024
    Hardback
    9781009324731
    584 pages
    261 × 184 × 34 mm
    1.33kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • List of illustrations
    • List of tables
    • Acknowledgements
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Frameworks
    • 3. Contexts
    • 4. Origins
    • 5. A cognitive revolution
    • 6. Hunter-gatherers of the late Pleistocene
    • 7. Archaeologies of the Pleistocene/Holocene transition
    • 8. Hunting, gathering, intensifying: forager histories in the Holocene before 2000 BP
    • 9. Taking stock: herders and hunter-gatherers
    • 10. Farmers and foragers: the first millennium
    • 11. Forming states: the Zimbabwe culture and its neighbours
    • 12. Recent farmers and hunter-gatherers in southernmost Africa
    • 13. Colonisation, conquest, resistance
    • 14. Perspectives and prospects
    • Glossary
    • References
    • Index.
      Author
    • Peter Mitchell , St. Hugh's College, Oxford University

      Peter Mitchell is Professor of African Archaeology at the University of Oxford, Tutor and Fellow of Archaeology of St Hugh's College, Oxford, and Research Associate at the Rock Art Research Institute, University of the Witswatersrand. A past president of the Society of African Archaeologists, he is co-editor of Azania: Archaeological Research in Africa.