
Contents
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Introduction Introduction
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Early Concepts of Regional Identity Early Concepts of Regional Identity
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From Region to Group From Region to Group
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Studying Group Identity: Ethnic Identity Studying Group Identity: Ethnic Identity
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Identity Primordialism and Isolationist Concepts Identity Primordialism and Isolationist Concepts
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Interaction, Cultural Construction, and Identity Instrumentalism Interaction, Cultural Construction, and Identity Instrumentalism
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Ethnic Power and Social Dominance Hierarchies Ethnic Power and Social Dominance Hierarchies
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Current and Future Directions for the Study of Iron Age Identities Current and Future Directions for the Study of Iron Age Identities
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Conclusions Conclusions
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Note Note
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References References
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35 Regions, Groups, and Identity: An Intellectual History
Get accessT. L. Thurston, University at Buffalo, The State University of New York
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Published:10 September 2018
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Abstract
Archaeologists once viewed super-individual identity as primordial and tied to territorial boundaries, useful for describing an orderly past and creating national or ethnic genealogies. Current research ties identities not to regions, but to groups: complex cultural constructions, expressed in varied yet simultaneous manifestations of bonds with family, lineage, clan, or polity, each with multiple shifting markers. These can involve kinship, status, gender, age, occupation, shared experience, and social memory, in turn impacted by wider sociopolitical, religious, and economic concerns. Between Iron Age groups, cooperation, détente, and conflict were equally likely; trade, travel, and familiarity resulted in material and ideological co-mingling, while still preserving difference, and involved symbolic and practical novelty, as well as continuity with the past. Once, such complexities caused archaeologists to label identity research impossible or unnecessary, but its exclusion often leads to misinterpretation. Fortunately, thoughtful considerations of method, materiality, and scale have resulted in productive new approaches.
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