
Contents
Part front matter for Section 1 Symbolic and Practical Settlement Interaction
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Published:April 2010
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The three chapters that make up section 1 delineate some of the central themes of this volume. Chapter 1 by Douglas K. Charles is particularly appropriate because his dual objective and cultural characterization of the lower Illinois River valley landscape during the Middle Woodland period articulates the major concern expressed in the introduction: How can Hopewellian archaeology synthesize the objective perspective that is almost second nature in North American archaeology, based on the view that no matter what kind of symbolic articulation a people might make of the world around them, their biological and social survival entails ensuring that this symbolic construction affords them an adequate flow of material energy in the form of food and shelter? He fully accomplishes this by elucidating a parallel scheme of structuring, an objective scheme in which riverine and upland resource availability is shown to be objectively constrained and generated by the particular linearity of the temperate climatic regime of this local “riverworld.” He then postulates a meaningful structuring of this same environment in terms that would not be unfamiliar to the prehistoric occupants themselves, given what we currently understand of the cultural traditions of their descendants (the historic Native American peoples of the Eastern Woodlands). This dual perspective nicely encapsulates and lays out the sort of interpretive approach to Hopewell that this book advocates.
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