ΒΙΒΛΙΟΚΡΙΣΙΕΣ | 2016
Murphy, J.M.A.
Classical Review
Murphy, J.M.A., 2016. Review of R. Hope Simpson, Mycenaean Messenia and the Kingdom of Pylos (INSTAP Prehistory Monographs 45) (Philadelphia, PA 2014), Classical Review 66.1: 231-233.
Sofia Voutsaki
Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology 29.1 (2016): 70-78
In this paper, I examine the role of reciprocal relations in processes of social change. More precisely, I discuss the transformation of modes of interaction and sumptuary behavior across a long period, from the collapse of the Early Bronze Age proto-urban societies, through the slow recovery during the Middle Bronze Age, to the intensification of social change during the transition to the Mycenaean period
Fanis Mavridis & Žarko Tankosić
Hesperia 85.2 (2016): 207-242
We present here the preliminary results of four seasons of excavation (2007-2010) within the Ayia Triada Cave, located in the vicinity of Karystos in southern Euboia.
Erwin Cook
Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology 29.1 (2016): 94-104
A modified version of Marshall Sahlins’s model of reciprocity, which maps the modes of reciprocity across kinship distance, helps elucidate reciprocity in Homer. With important qualifications, Homeric reciprocity can also elucidate the social realities of Archaic Greece.
Legarra Herrero, B.
Classical Review
Legarra Herrero, B., 2016. Review of P.P. Betancourt, Aphrodite’s Kephali. An Early Minoan I Defensive Site in Eastern Crete (INSTAP Prehistory Monographs 41) (Philadelphia, PA 2013), Classical Review 66.1: 233-235.
Daniel J. Pullen
Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology 29.1 (2016): 78-88
Reciprocity has seen much less attention by Aegean archaeologists than other economic concepts such as redistribution, largely because of an assumption that reciprocity is characteristic of ‘egalitarian’ or less developed societies, as well as a related interest in political economies of more complex (palatial) societies, which are assumed to be characterized by redistribution.
Bryan E. Burns
Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology 29.1 (2016): 88-94
This contribution broadens the scope of the discussion to consider reciprocity in relation to acts of Mycenaean exchange that extend beyond the Aegean.
Tristan Carter, Daniel A. Contreras, Kathryn Campeau & Kyle Freund
Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology 29.1 (2016): 3-36
This paper details the results of a survey of the obsidian sources on the island of Giali in the Dodecanese, Greece, together with a review of these raw materials’ use from the Mesolithic to the Late Bronze Age (ninth to second millennium Cal BC).
Sarah P. Morris
Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology 29.1 (2016): 111-118
This response to a set of wide-ranging papers on the dimensions of reciprocity in Bronze Age Greece introduces three areas for further research, in order to expand the framework in terms of gender, space, and time.
Carla Antonaccio
Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology 29.1 (2016): 104-111
This paper focuses on reciprocity in the context of Bronze Age collapse and early Iron Age ‘reboot’. The highest level of Mycenaean hierarchy collapsed, but neither the entire system, nor the entire ideology, vanished with the palaces: the basileus and a warrior elite survived and moved into places of authority.
Dimitri Nakassis, Michael L. Galaty & William A. Parkinson
Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology 29.1 (2016): 61-132
This collection of papers is the third and final installment in a series meant to update the archaeological study of Aegean Bronze Age economies based on current research in economic anthropology and new archaeological and textual data from Minoan and Mycenaean states.
Štěpán Rückl & Loe Jacobs
Hesperia 85.2 (2016): 297-321
In this article, we reconsider manufacturing techniques of Protogeometric ceramic production in central Greece.
Isaakidou, V.
Classical Review
Isaakidou, V., 2016. Review of N. Efstratiou, A. Karetsou, M. Ntinou (eds), The Neolithic Settlement of Knossos in Crete. New Evidence for the Early Occupation of Crete and the Aegean Islands (INSTAP Prehistory Monographs 42) (Philadelphia, PA 2013), Classical Review 66.1: 229-231.
Christopher M. Hale
Hesperia 85.2 (2016): 243-295
A preliminary, seven-phase Fine Gray Burnished (Gray Minyan) ceramic sequence has been developed at Mitrou, East Lokris, spanning the whole of the Middle Helladic period.
Duncan Howitt-Marshall & Curtis Runnels
Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 42 (2016): 140–153
Lower and Middle Palaeolithic artifacts on Greek islands separated from the mainland in the Middle and Upper Pleistocene may be proxy evidence for maritime activity in the eastern Mediterranean.