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Ancient Jomon of Japan

Ancient Jomon of Japan

Ancient Jomon of Japan

Junko Habu, University of California, Berkeley
July 2004
Paperback
9780521776707
£27.00
GBP
Paperback
GBP
Hardback

    In this 2004 book, Junko Habu illustrates recent developments in the archaeology of the Jomon period (circa 14,500–300 BC) of Japan and presents new analyses. Unlike most prehistoric pottery using peoples, the Jomon people are thought to have been hunter-gatherers. Evidence of plant cultivation does exist, but none of the cultigens recovered from Jomon sites seems to have been used as a staple food resource. High site density, food storage, and long distance trade also characterize this Jomon period. Using ecological models of hunter-gatherer culture and behavior, Habu examines various aspects of Jamon culture including subsistence, settlement, rituals, crafts and trade, and presents a model of long-term change in hunter-gatherer cultural complexity. In this comprehensive analysis, Junko Habu helps to bridge the gap between largely Japanese discourse on this 10,000 year period of Japanese prehistory and the modern scientific debate on later hunter-gatherer societies. It will prove invaluable to students and researchers alike.

    • Synthesises a vast amount of site data in an accessible format
    • The first substantial English language overview of the Jomon (most work has been done in Japanese)
    • Covers a 10,000 year sweep of Japanese prehistory

    Reviews & endorsements

    '… this book is comprehensive, informative and academically exciting.' Antiquity

    'Junko Habu has provided a detailed, comprehensive, and stimulating account of Jomon variety and development … Habu's historical overviews of research trends, syntheses of current results, good grounding in theory, acute observations, and gently stated criticisms have yielded a state-of- the-art book that will serve as the authoritative introduction to the Jomon for a long time to come.' Monumenta Nipponica

    'the distinctive aspects covered in this book include the chapters in which Habu presents her original reconstruction of Jomon society based on Anglo-American theories, particularly in relation to the hunter-gatherer models create by Lewis Binford. these chapters make this book a rarity in Japanese archaeology, with the exception of an earlier monograph written by Habu (2001) herslef, and Habu's arguments are important in delineating new hypotheses in Jomon research.' Anthropoligical Science

    'The book is comprehensive and covers all aspects of Jomon … Habu's survey not only informs the western reader thoroughly but also offers interesting analogies for comparisons between complex hunter-gatherer societies world-wide.' Journal of Comparative Human Biology

    See more reviews

    Product details

    July 2004
    Paperback
    9780521776707
    352 pages
    232 × 165 × 22 mm
    0.56kg
    79 b/w illus. 30 maps 15 tables
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Part I. Overview:
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Background to the study: overview of the Jomon Period
    • Part II. Subsistence and Settlement:
    • 3. Subsistence strategies
    • 4. Settlement archaeology
    • Part III. Rituals, Crafts and Trade:
    • 5. Mortuary and ceremonial practices
    • 6. Crafts and exchange networks
    • Part IV. Discussion and Conclusion:
    • 7. Discussion and conclusion.
      Author
    • Junko Habu , University of California, Berkeley

      Junko Habu is Associate Professor at the Department of Anthropology, University of California at Berkeley. She has conducted fieldwork both in Japan and in North America. Her publications include Subsistence-Settlement Systems and Intersite Variability in the Moroiso Phase of the Early Jomon Period of Japan, International Monographs in Prehistory (2001).