TAG program

Tag95 (Tag95@READING.AC.UK)
Wed, 25 Oct 1995 12:35:14 +0000

THEORETICAL ARCHAEOLOGY GROUP CONFERENCE 1995
GENERAL INFORMATION

The 1995 Conference of the Theoretical Archaeology Group will be hosted by the Department of Archaeology at the University of Reading (18th 21st December). The conference will comprise a plenary address and nineteen sessions spread over four days. Throug
hout all but the first day there will be four sessions running concurrently. The academic programme will be augmented by social events each evening. T.A.G. 95 is open to everyone.

Enquiries: General enquiries about the conference should be directed to Jan Harding in the Department of Archaeology, University of Reading (Tel: 01734 318132/ Fax: 01734 316718/Email: M.A.James@reading.ac.uk). For information about bookings, accommodatio
n etc., contact Nyree Finlay/Paddy Woodman (01734 316785/Email: Tag95@reading.ac.uk).

Applications: If you wish to attend the conference please complete the application form and return with remittance to:

TAG. 95 (APPLICATIONS), DEPARTMENT OF ARCHAEOLOGY, FACULTY OF LETTERS AND SOCIAL SCIENCES, WHITEKNIGHTS, UNIVERSITY OF READING, PO BOX 218, READING RG6 2AA, UNITED KINGDOM.

TEL: 01734316785

Conference fee: Payment of conference fee entitles participants to attend all academic sessions and social events during T.A.G 95, to receive a delegate pack including final programme with session and paper abstracts, and to partake of tea and coffee as a
vailable.

Accommodation: Bed and Breakfast accommodation is available in University Hall of Residence single bedrooms, all centrally heated and with washbasins, on the nights of 18th, 19th and 20th December. Participants who require accommodation on other nights sh
ould contact Jan Harding on the numbers above. Please note that twin/double rooms are not available. There are also a small number of single selfcatering rooms, as well as free floor space, for unwaged delegates. Please make any enquiries to Nyree Finlay/
Paddy Woodman (01734 316785) by 30th November at the latest.

Speakers and session organisers: Please note that all participants, including speakers and session organisers, must pay for their registration, accommodation and food. Everyone attending the conference in any capacity must return an application form with
the appropriate remittance.

Cancellations: Cancellations made in writing before 30th November will receive a full refund. No refund can be made for cancellations received after this date but substitutes will be accepted.

Parking: There is ample free carparking space at the University of Reading. All applicants to the conference will receive a map with the carparks clearly marked.

Child care: Daytime child care may be available for an additional charge. Enquiries for this facility must be made to Jan Harding on the numbers above before 17th November.

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T.A.G. 95: 18th 21st December
SUMMARY OF SESSIONS

MONDAY 18TH DECEMBER PM

% Plenary Address: The InterDisciplinary Nature of Archaeology

TUESDAY 19TH DECEMBER AM

% The Archaeology of Creative Thought
% Human Use of Finite Resources: OverExploitation and Public Goods Models
% The Organisation of Archaeology
% Old Pots, New Perspectives: New Approaches to the Study of Prehistoric

Ceramics

TUESDAY 19TH DECEMBER PM

% Rethinking Social Territory in Prehistory

% Human Use of Finite Resources: OverExploitation and Public Goods Models

% Disabling Archaeology

% General Perspectives in Theoretical Archaeology

WEDNESDAY 20TH DECEMBER AM

% The Cultural Politics of the Body: the Uses and Abuses of Biology
% Off the Record: Critical Approaches to Current Archaeological Practice
% Who's Minding the Stores? The Role of Storage in the Development of

Sociocultural Complexity

% Northern Exposure: Interpretative Devolution and the Iron Age of the British

Isles

WEDNESDAY 20TH DECEMBER PM

% The Architectural Psyche

% The Ethics of Historical Representation

% General Perspectives in Art

% From RComplexity" to "Complex Society": Mediterranean Europe before Rome

THURSDAY 21ST DECEMBER AM

% Archaeology in Ireland and the Construction of National Identities
% Past and Present: Modern Material Culture
% Life
% Heritage, Politics and Archaeology

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PROVISIONAL PROGRAMME

A wallet containing the final programme and timetable, abstract booklet, and other information will be given to each participant at the Registration Desk on arrival. Please note that the order of papers within any particular session will not necessarily b
e as given below.

MONDAY 18TH DECEMBER PM

14.00 17.30 Plenary Address: The InterDisciplinary Nature of Archaeology Speakers will include Patrick Kirch (Department of Anthropology, University of California, Berkeley, USA), Robert Bovd (Department of Anthropology, University of California, Los Ange
les, USA) and Anthony Brown (Department of Geography University of Exeter, UK).

Further details in final programme.
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TUESDAY l9TH DECEMBER AM

9.00 12.45 The Archaeology of Creative Thought Session Organiser: Steven Mithen (Department of Archaeology, University of Reading, UK).

Margaret Boden. The Creative Mind.
Richard Byrne. Creative Thinking by Monkeys and Apes.
Clive Gamble. Neanderthal Creativity.
Steven Mithen. Creative Thinking and the Origins of Art.
Robert Lavton. Creative Thinking in Traditional Aboriginal Society.
Ian Hodder. Plus ca Change.... How Can Archaeology Contribute to an Understanding of Creativity.
Richard Bradley. The Good Stones: Architecture, Imagination and the Neolithic World.
Colin Renfrew. Chevalier d'honneur: Assessing the Mental Map in the European Iron Age.

Chair and Discussant: to be announced.

9.00 12.00 Human Use of Finite Resources: OverExploitation and Public Goods Models
Session Organiser: James Steele (Department of Archaeology, University of Southampton, UK).

Robert Bovd. Group Size, Norms, and the Evolution of Cooperation. Andrew Fleming. The Changing Commons: the Case of Swaledale (England).
Bobbi Low. Why we are not Environmental Altruists.
James McGlade. NonLinear Modelling of Human Ecodynamics. Stephen Shennan. Escalatory Processes in the Exploitation of Materials for Status Signalling and StatusNegotiation.

Chair and Discussant: James Steele.

9.00 12.50 The Organisation of Archaeology
Session Organiser: John Carman (Department of Archaeology, University of Cambridge, UK).

John Carman. The Political Economy of Archaeology: Organising a 'Useful' Resource.
Antony Firth. Archaeological Power Containers: City, County, Country, Continent.
Koji Mizoguchi. The Reproduction of Japanese Archaeological Discourse: A Structurationist Critique.
Stephanie Moser. Archaeology and its Disciplinary Culture: The Institutional Dynamics of Community Formation.
Susan Thomas. Archaeological Writing and the Expression of Disciplinary Organisation.
Diura Thoden van Velzen. Beyond the Bounds of Professional Archaeology: Tomb Robbers, Amateurs and Collectors in Italy. Sarah Colley. Cultural Policy, Cultural Heritage and the Organisation of Australian Archaeology.
Malcolm Cooper. Do Traditional Perspectives on Archaeological Organisations Actually Help us to do Good Archaeology?

Chair and Discussant: John Carman.

9.00 11.30 Old Pots, New Perspectives: New Approaches to the Study of Prehistoric Ceramics
Session Organiser: Ann Woodward and J.D. Hill (on behalf of the Prehistoric Ceramic Research Group).

Ann Woodward. Bronze and Iron Age Vessel Size, Form and Function.
J.D.Hill. From Middle to Late Iron Age Pottery in East Anglia. Were changes in Repertoire and Deposition as (or more) important than the Introduction of the Potter's Wheel?
Adam Gwilt. Deposition and IntraSite Patterning of Pottery on Iron Age Settlements in Northamptonshire.
Robin Boast. Pots as Categories: British Beakers.

Chair and Discussants: Ann Woodward and J.D.Hill.


TUESDAY l9TH DECEMBER PM

14.00 17.30 Rethinking Social Territory in Prehistory
Session Organiser: Jan Harding (Department of Archaeology, University of Reading, UK).

Keith Ray. Lineage and the Land.
Chris Gosden. Centres of Gravity: Multiple Territories in West New Britain, Papua New Guinea .
Jan Harding. Pathways to New Realms: Cursus Monuments and Symbolic Territories.
Barbara Bender, Sue Hamilton and Christopher Tilley. Leskernick: The Spirit of the Place.
Paul Garwood. Territory and Cosmography in the Early Bronze Age. Mike Parker Pearson. Time, Territory and Tradition: Reconstructing Prehistoric Territories in South Uist, Outer Hebrides.
Nigel Spencer. A Duality of Possession and Identity: Greeks and Anatolians in Lesbos during the Early Iron Age and Archaic Periods.

Chair: Jan Harding. Discussant: Tim Ingold.

14.00 17.15 Human Use of Finite Resources: OverExploitation and Public Goods Models
Session Organiser: James Steele (Department of Archaeology, University of Southampton, UK).

Clive Gamble and James Steele. Human Group Sizes, Dietary Strategies, and the Relation between Human Range Expansion and Animal Extinctions.
Steven Mithen. Simulation Modelling of Mammoth Hunting and Mammoth Population Dynamics, in Relation to Megafaunal Extinctions.
Pippa Smith. Sustantainable Fishing: Fact or Fantasy.
Dale Serjeantson. Social Dynamics of the Extinction of the Great Auk in Island Scotland.
Kate Clark. OverExploitation, Breeding Stress, and Maladaptive Genetic Traits in Domesticates.
Jonathon Adams. The Past as a Key to the Future: Global Environmental Change, Human Impact, and Climate Models.

Chair and Discussant: James Steele.

14.00 17.00 Disabling Archaeology
Session Organiser: Nyree Finlay (Department of Archaeology, University of Reading, UK).

Theya Molleson. The Archaeological Evidence for Attitudes to Disability in the Past.
Chris Knusel. Orthopaedic Disability: Some Hard Evidence.
Morag Cross. Accessing the InaccessibleDisability and Archaeology.
Kevin Taylor. A Neolithic Paradox?
Charlotte Roberts. Disability in the Skeletal Record: Assumptions, Problems and some Examples.

Chair and Discussant: Tom Shakesphere.


14.00 17.50 General Perspectives in Theoretical Archaeology Session Organiser: TAG. Committee (Department of Archaeology, University of Reading, UK).

Bjorn Andersson. Archaeology as Communication.
Fiona Campbell and Jonna Hansson. Archaeology as Sacred Space. Archaeology for its Own Ends or for Directed Ends?
Farid Rahemtulla. Variability, Analogy, and Scales of Interpretation in Archaeology.
Lynn Meskell. Writing the Body: Institutions, Discourses and Corporeality.
Pavel Dolukhanov. Where Lies the Divide?
Yannis Hamilakis. Deconstructing Subsistence: Towards an Archaeology of Eating and Drinking.
Louise Hitchcock. Of Bar Stools and Beehives: An Interpretive Dialog about a Minoan Store Room.

Chair and Discussant: to be announced.
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WEDNESDAY 20TH DECEMBER AM

9.00 12.45 The Cultural Politics of the Body: the Uses and Abuses of Biology
Session Organiser: Mary Baker and Susan Pitt (Departments of Archaeology/ History, University of Wales, Lampeter, UK).

Mary Baker. Gender and Sex, Cultural or Natural?
James Bradley and Hamish MaxwellStewart. Body Narratives: Reading the 'Bleeding' Obvious?
Paul GravesBrown. Natural Born Killers? The Politics of Sociobiology.
Tim Ingold. Against Evolutionary Psychology.
Yvonne Marshall. Of Sex and Reproduction.
Jonathon Sawday. Fighting in the Field of Nature: The Politics of the Uterus in Early Modern Science and Culture.
Susan Pitt. The Cultural Construction of Birth: Or Why Childbirth Isn't Natural.
Tim Walley. Archaeology and Sociobiology: What Place Emotions?

Chair and Discussants: Mary Baker and Susan Pitt.

9.00 12.15 Off the Record: Critical Approaches to Current Archaeological Practice
Session Organiser: Olivia Lelong (Department of Archaeology, University of Glasgow, UK).

Michael Shanks. Technical Progress and Political Futures.
Demetra Papaconstantinou. Intrasite Spatial Variability: Evaluating the Record and Redefining the objectives.
Tony Pollard. Still Digging: the Work and Play of Archaeology.
Jane Downes and Colin Richards. Toward a Thicker Report.
Olivia Lelong. Picking up the Pieces: A Reconsideration of Artefact Studies.
John Barrett. Is an Integrated Excavation Record and Report Possible?

Chair and Discussant: Jenny Moore.

9.0012.15 "Who's Minding the Stores?" The Role of Storage in the Development of Sociocultural Complexity
Session Organiser: Rick Schulting (Department of Archaeology, University of Reading, UK).

Richard Bradley. A Granary in Galicia.
Liliana Janik. Questioning the Link between Storage, Private Ownership and Complexity in Prehistoric Northern Europe.
Andy Jones. Bowled Over: Social Change, Storage and the Unstan Ware/Grooved Ware Transition in the Orcadian Neolithic.
Simon Kaner. Storage and Complexity in Jomon Japan.
Rick Schulting. Storage and Ownership in the Archaeological Record of Hunter Gatherers.
Thomas Strasser. Storage and State Formation: another Aegean Perspective.

Chair: Rick Schlting Discussant: Marek Zvelebil.

9.00 I2.30 Northern Exposure: Interpretative Devolution and the Iron Age of the British Isles
Session Organiser: Bill Bevan (Peak District National Park, UK).

Jane Webster. Here be Dragons!: Roman Attitudes to Northern Britain.
Chris Cumberpatch and Graham Robbins. South Yorkshire and Wessex.
Steve Willis. Unpacking 'Regional Identity': Culture and Community in the Iron Age of NorthEastern England.
Eoin Grogan. The Iron Age in Ireland? Funny you Should Ask.
Angela Piccini. The Iron Age and Landscapes of Heritage in Modern Wales.
Richard Hingley. Ancestors and Identity in the Iron Age of Atlantic Scotland.
Mike ParkerPearson. Food, Sex and Death: Kinship and Social Structure in the East Yorkshire Iron Age.

Chair: Colin Haselgrove Discussant: Chris Gosden

WEDNESDAY 20TH DECEMBER PM

14.00 17.15 The Architectural Psyche
Session Organiser: Nicola Bestley (Department of Archaeology, University of Cambridge, UK).

Nicola Bestley. Architecture and Being: The Construction of Human Space and Identity.
Julian Thomas. Monuments, Materiality and Modernity.
Jeremy Dronfield. The Stone Universe: Cosmos and Architecture in Later Neolithic Ireland.
Colin Richards. Water as Natural Architecture.
Mathew Johnson. Architecture and Identity in Renaissance England.

Chair and Discussant: to be announced.

14.00 17.15 The Ethics of Historical Representation
Session Organiser: Robert Eaglestone (Department of English, University of Wales, Lampeter, UK).

Mary Baker. Body Politics.
Susan Pitt. Feminism, Logocentrism and the Discipline of History. Robert Eaglestone. The (Un)Narratable: Ethics and the Construction of Historical Narratives.
Michael Tierney. The World Archaeological Congress 1994 and the Politics of the Past.
Patrick Finney. Ethics and Historical Relativism: The Challenge of Holocaust Denial.
Tom Webster. The Word of God and the Religious Past.

Chair and Discussant: Robert Eaglestone.

14.00 17.15 General Perspectives in Art
Session Organiser: TAG. Committee (Department of Archaeology, University of Reading, UK).

EvaMarie Goransson. In the Space between Object and Art. Camilla Power and lan Watts. Sexual Deception and the Origins of Art.
George Nash. The Performance of Saharan Rock Art lnfluences and Structuration.
Caroline Malone and Simon Stoddart. The Origins of Art in an Island Society.
Jens Ipsen. The Role of Pictographs in the Cultural Complexity of Eastern Finland.
Andy Jones. Sticks, Stones and Broken Bones: Natural Symbols in the Orcadian
Neolithic.
George Nash. Wet, Dry: High and Dry: A ReEvaluation of the Rock Painting Site at
Tumhehed, Torslanda, Goteborg.

Chair and Discussant: to be announced.

14.0017.45 From "Complexity" to "Complex Society": Mediterranean Europe before Rome
Session Organiser: Bob Chapman, Catriona Gibson, Sturt Manning and Sarah Monks (Department of Archaeology, University of Reading, UK).

Bob Chapman and Sarah Monks. Complexity in the Mediterranean Past: Definitional Problems for Comparative Analysis.
Sturt Manning. Perspectives on Complexity and Change: The More Things Change the More they Stay the Same.
Vicente Lull. What do we Mean by 'State': A Spanish Perspective. Ian Morris. Complex Problems in Iron Age Greece.
Francis DeMita. Trading In and Trading Up: Mapping Shifting Power Configurations in the Late Bronze Age of the East Mediterranean. Bernard Knapp. Comparative Space, Maritime Place.
Catriona Gibson. "Hot in the City Tonight". The Emergence ofWest Iberia in the First Millennium BC.
Georgia Nakou. 'The Cutting Edge': Metallurgy and Society in the Later Neolithic and Early Bronze Age Aegean.

Chair and Discussants: Bob Chapman, Catriona Gibson, Sturt Manning and Sarah Monks.
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THURSDAY 21ST DECEMBER AM

9.00 13.00 Archaeology in Ireland and the Construction of National Identities
Session Organiser: Maggie Ronayne (Department of Archaeology, University of Southampton, UK.).

Maggie Ronayne. Gender, Nation and the Politics of Identity in Archaeology in Ireland.
Michael Tierney. Bourgeois Nationalism and Empiricist Archaeology: the Case of Ireland.
Dorcas Boreland. Irish Antiquarians in the Nineteenth Century. John Tierney: Title to be announced.
Diarmait Mac Giolla Chriost. Material Culture and Ethnic Conflict in Northern Ireland.
Jerry O'Sullivan. Archaeologists and Early Christians: Diversity and Uniformity.
Gabriel Cooney. From a Distance there is Harmony Writing the Neolithic.
Stephen Johnston. "Nothing but the Heavens and the Bog": Landscape Archaeology and Issues of Identity.
Julian Thomas. Parallel Identities and the Mesolithic/Neolithic Transition.

Chair: Maggie Ronayne Discussant: Mike Rowlands

9.00 12.30 Past and Present: Modern Material Culture
Session Organiser: Paul GravesBrown (Department of Psychology, University of Southampton, UK.).

Orla Cronin. Mirrors and Prisms: The Functions of Photographs in Family Life.
Thomas Dowson. From the Rocks to TShirts: Power and the Popular Consumption of Rock Art Imagery.
Paul GravesBrown. Mysterious Objects.
Neil Jarman. Styles of BelongingDisplays of Intent.
Beth Preston. How Things Change. Form, Function, and Change of Function.
John Schofield. TAG and AntiHeritage: Perceptions of Punk, Pop and the TPistols.
James Steele. Skill, Motivational State, and the Sociology of the Emotions: a Comparative Perspective.

Chair and Discussant: Paul GravesBrown.

9.0012.15 Life
Session Organiser: Duncan Brown and Keith Matthews (Department of Psychology, University of Southampton, UK.).

Julie Bond. Food.
Eleanor Scott. Children.
Duncan Brown and Alan Chalmers. Light.
Keith Matthews. Icons.
Paul Blinkhorn. Drugs.
Mike Morris. Entropy.

Chair and Discussant: Duncan Brown and Keith Matthew.s.

9.00 11.00 Heritage, Politics and Archaeology
Session Organiser: TAG. Committee (Department of Archaeology, University of Reading, UK.).

Daniel Mouer. Digging Sites and Telling Stories: History, Narrative and the Culture Problem.
Louise Hitchcock. Virtual Discourse: Arthur Evans and the Reconstructions of the Minoan Palace at Knossos.
Michael Eddy. Political Interference in Archaeological Research in the Canary Islands.
Eleana Yalouri. A Manner of Taste: the SocioPolitics of Aesthetics and the Athenian Acropolis.

Chair and Discussant: to be announced.

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If you are interested in attending this years TAG print out the following application form and return either by fax or snail mail.



T.A.G. T95 APPLICATION FORM

Please complete in block capitals and return, with remittance, by 30th November to:

TAG. 95 (APPLICATIONS), DEPARTMENT OF ARCHAEOLOGY, FACULTY OF LETTERS AND SOCIAL SCIENCES, WHITEKNIGHTS, UNIVERSITY OF READING, P.O. BOX 218, READING RG6 2AA, UNITED KINGDOM.
FAX: (01734) 316718 TELEPHONE: 01734 316785 E-MAIL: Tag95@reading.ac.uk

Surname:__________________________ First Name(s):____________________ Title:______
Address:____________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________ Post Code:____________________
Phone: ___________________________________ Fax:________________________________
E-mail: ___________________________________


CONFERENCE REGISTRATION FEES (Please tick as appropriate)
Waged Participants.................................... #25.00 ...........
Unwaged Participants................................. #13.00 ...........
Please indicate if you have any special mobility requirements:_______________________

ACCOMMODATION FEES
Bed and Breakfast in single rooms in University Halls of Residence
B & B on Monday 18th December.................. #18.35
B & B on Tuesday 19th December..................#18.35 ...........
B & B on Wednesday 20th December.............. #18.35 ............

For unwaged participants a small number of self-catering rooms for #13.00 will also be available along with a limited amount of free floor space. Enquiries by 30th November to Nyree Finlay or Paddy Woodman in the Dept. of Archaeology, Univ. of Reading
(Tel: 01734 316785).

MEAL FEES (Lunches and Dinners)
Dinner on Monday 18th December................ #7.60 ...........
Lunch on Tuesday 19th December..................#5.75 ...........
Dinner on Tuesday 19th December.................#7.60 ...........
Lunch on Wednesday 20th December............... #5.75 ...........
Dinner on Wednesday 20th December.............. #7.60 ...........
Special dietary requirements___________________________________________
TOTAL of registration, accommodation and meal fees: #_________________

Cheques to be made payable to 'University of Reading'
OR Please charge my Access/Visa/Mastercard: Card No._____________________________
Expiry date: _________________ Name (as it appears on card): ___________________________
Credit card address (if different from above): __________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________ Post Code: _______________________


SIGNED: __________________________________ DATE: __________________

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Please indicate which sessions you are most likely to attend (tick as appropriate):

TUESDAY 19TH DECEMBER AM
..... The Archaeology of Creative Thought
..... Human Use of Finite Resources: Over-Exploitation and Public Goods Models
.... The Organisation of Archaeology
..... Old Pots, New Perspectives: New Approaches to the Study of Prehistoric Ceramics
TUESDAY 19TH DECEMBER PM
..... Rethinking Social Territory in Prehistory
..... Human Use of Finite Resources: Over-Exploitation and Public Goods Models
..... Disabling Archaeology
..... General Perspectives in Theoretical Archaeology
WEDNESDAY 20TH DECEMBER AM
..... The Cultural Politics of the Body: the Uses and Abuses of Biology
..... Off the Record: Critical Approaches to Current Archaeological Practice
..... WhoUs Minding the Stores? The Role of Storage in the Development of Sociocultural Complexity
..... Northern Exposure: Interpretative Devolution and the Iron Age of the British Isles
WEDNESDAY 20TH DECEMBER PM
..... The Architectural Psyche
..... The Ethics of Historical Representation
..... General Perspectives in Art
..... From RComplexityS to RComplex SocietyS: Mediterranean Europe before Rome
THURSDAY 21ST DECEMBER AM
..... Archaeology in Ireland and the Construction of National Identities
..... Past and Present: Modern Material Culture
..... Life
..... Heritage, Politics and Archaeology