Beyond Thalassocracies aims to evaluate and rethink the manner in which archaeologists approach, understand, and analyze the various processes associated with culture change connected to interregional contact, using as a test case the world of the Aegean during the Late Bronze Age (c. 1600–1100 BC). The 14 chapters compare and contrast various aspects of the phenomena of Minoanisation and Mycenaeanisation, both of which share the basic underlying defining feature of material culture change in communities around the Aegean. This change was driven by trends manifesting themselves in the dominant palatial communities of each period of the Bronze Age. Over the past decade, our understanding of how these processes developed and functioned has changed considerably. Whereas current discussions on Minoanisation have already been informed by more recent theoretical trends, especially in material culture studies and post‐colonial theory, the process of Mycenaeanisation is still very much conceptualized along traditional lines of explanation. Since these phenomena occurred in chronological sequence, it makes sense that any reappraisal of their nature and significance should target those regions of the Aegean basin that were affected by both processes, highlighting their similarities and differences. Thus, in the present volume we focus on the southern and eastern Aegean, in particular the Cyclades, Dodecanese, and the northeastern Aegean islands.
Table of Contents
Preface
Contributors
1. Introduction – Methodological considerations
Evi Gorogianni, Peter Pavúk & Luca Girella
2. The Nature of Minoan and Mycenaean Involvement in the Northeastern Aegean
Luca Girella & Peter Pavúk
3. Minoanisation, Mycenaeanisation, and Mobility: a View from Southwest Anatolia
Jana Mokrišová
4. Discerning Acculturation at Miletus: Minoanisation and Mycenaeanisation
Amy Raymond, Ivonne Kaiser, Laura-Concetta Rizzotto & Julien Zurbach
5. Cultural Entanglements on Kos during the Late Bronze Age: A Comparative Analysis of Minoanisation and Mycenaeanisation at the “Serraglio”, Eleona, and Langada
Salvatore Vitale
6. Melos in the Middle: Minoanisation and Mycenaeanisation at Late Bronze Age Phylakopi
Jason W. Earle
7. Neither far from Knossos nor close to Mycenae. Naxos in the Middle and Late Bronze Age Aegean
Andreas Vlachopoulos
8. Keian, Kei-noanised, Kei-cenaeanised? Interregional Contact and Identity in Ayia Irini, Kea
Evi Gorogianni
9. Adoption and Adaptation in Pottery Production Practices: Investigating Cycladic Community Interactions through the Ceramic Record of the Second Millennium BC
Natalie Abell & Jill Hilditch
10. Fashioning Identity: Weaving Technology, Dress and Cultural Change in the Middle and Late Bronze Age Southern Aegean
Joanne Cutler
11. Mycenaeanisation in Thessaly. A Study in Differential Acculturation
Bryan Feuer
12. Minoanisation and Mycenaeanisation: A Commentary
Carl Knappett
13. The Mycenaeanisation Process
Michael L. Galaty
Index
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