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The social and material life of Neanderthals

The social and material life of Neanderthals
The social and material life of Neanderthals
While it is a commonplace to state that every age gets the Neanderthals it either deserves, or wants, there has recently been a sea-change in these just-desserts and needs. It has taken 150 years for Neanderthals to emerge as humans with a difference and this difference depends not on the shape of the skulls or tools but rather in their competence as social actors. Here, I set out an approach that supplements the rational analysis of their behavior with a relational understanding of their lives. Using the social brain hypothesis I argue that the differences between these perspectives have important implications for the development of Paleolithic archaeology, and in particular the role of artifacts as material metaphors based on the experience of social life.
157-166
Gamble, Clive
1cbd0b26-ddac-4dc2-9cf7-59c66d06103a
Conard, N.J.
db636d24-3b98-4ef6-bc7d-fba62d73b9bf
Richter, J.
93abd6b3-0809-421e-bff9-f43775dc91d2
Gamble, Clive
1cbd0b26-ddac-4dc2-9cf7-59c66d06103a
Conard, N.J.
db636d24-3b98-4ef6-bc7d-fba62d73b9bf
Richter, J.
93abd6b3-0809-421e-bff9-f43775dc91d2

Gamble, Clive , Conard, N.J. and Richter, J. (eds.) (2011) The social and material life of Neanderthals. Neanderthal Lifeways, Subsistence and Technology. Vertebrate Paleobiology and Paleoanthropology, 19, 157-166. (doi:10.1007/978-94-007-0415-2_15).

Record type: Article

Abstract

While it is a commonplace to state that every age gets the Neanderthals it either deserves, or wants, there has recently been a sea-change in these just-desserts and needs. It has taken 150 years for Neanderthals to emerge as humans with a difference and this difference depends not on the shape of the skulls or tools but rather in their competence as social actors. Here, I set out an approach that supplements the rational analysis of their behavior with a relational understanding of their lives. Using the social brain hypothesis I argue that the differences between these perspectives have important implications for the development of Paleolithic archaeology, and in particular the role of artifacts as material metaphors based on the experience of social life.

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Published date: 2011
Organisations: Archaeology

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 346153
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/346153
PURE UUID: 9e392fef-fcc8-469d-9395-a4b980d39dd0

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Date deposited: 19 Dec 2012 12:03
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 12:33

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Contributors

Author: Clive Gamble
Editor: N.J. Conard
Editor: J. Richter

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