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Tracking ceramic chaînes opératoires within everyday life spaces to bridge vessels’ and humans’ biographies. Some methodological reflections from West-Asian fieldworks

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    0575083 - OÚ 2024 eng A - Abstract
    Zingarello, Melania - Baldi, J. S.
    Tracking ceramic chaînes opératoires within everyday life spaces to bridge vessels’ and humans’ biographies. Some methodological reflections from West-Asian fieldworks.
    [Annual Meeting of the European Association of Archaeologists /29./. Belfast, 30.08.2023-02.09.2023]
    Method of presentation: Přednáška
    Event organizer: European Association of Archaeologists and Queen's University Belfast
    URL events: https://www.e-a-a.org/eaa2023 
    Grant - others:French National Research Agency Grant(FR) ANR-22-CE27-0003
    Institutional support: RVO:68378009
    Keywords : Mesopotamia * Late Chalcolithic * Early Bronze Age * ceramic chaînes opératoires * vessel biographies
    OECD category: Archaeology

    The study of vessels’ biographies – namely the series of actions, customs, gestures, and procedures taking place throughout their cycle of interactions with humans – is often dominated by a polarisation of the focus on a specific phase of their ‘lifetime’ and the heuristic perspective that follows. By studying the ceramic chaînes opératoires, one looks at the methods, structure and organisation of the past production systems and craftspeople behind them. While analysing shapes, decorations, functions, and ways of deposition means investigating the practices of handling and disposal of the pottery users. The spatial contextualisation of the pottery chaînes opératoires, especially within the domestic spaces of living and working, constitutes an approach that makes it possible to interpolate the study of craft production with that of the practices performed with the pots. Through case studies of late prehistoric (5th and 4th millennia BCE) and Early Bronze Age (3th Millennium BCE) contexts from Tell Feres al-Sharqi (in the Syrian Jazeera, Hassake Province) and Logardan (in Iraqi Kurdistan, Sulaymaniyah Governorate), this paper aims to present and discuss the conditions allowing for the application of this approach, as well as its informative potential as a heuristic means. The aim is to show what the mapping of the spatial distribution of operational sequences can reveal about the relationships structurally linking the various phases of a vessel’s biography as a function of the social organisation of the community that produced, used, and discarded it.
    Permanent Link: https://hdl.handle.net/11104/0347481

     
     
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