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Resources in Premodern Societies: New Approaches to Lifeworlds, Skills and Complexity [Pehme köide]

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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 310 pages, kõrgus x laius: 254x178 mm, 65fc / 18bw
  • Ilmumisaeg: 26-Mar-2026
  • Kirjastus: Sidestone Press
  • ISBN-10: 9464271507
  • ISBN-13: 9789464271508
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 310 pages, kõrgus x laius: 254x178 mm, 65fc / 18bw
  • Ilmumisaeg: 26-Mar-2026
  • Kirjastus: Sidestone Press
  • ISBN-10: 9464271507
  • ISBN-13: 9789464271508
Teised raamatud teemal:
This book explores how resources shaped premodern lifeworlds, technological skills, and complex social systems through interdisciplinary studies ranging from mining communities and metallurgy to craft traditions and agent-based modelling.

This volume brings together innovative research to explore the profound impact of resources on the development of early societies. Divided into three major themes – lifeworlds in resource landscapes, skill and embodied knowledge, and the role of resources within complex systems – the volume draws on diverse case studies, from Bronze Age Chinese mining to Iron Age preurban resource management and the metallurgy-pastoralism nexus. Contributors reveal how materials were not merely extracted but embedded within cognitive frameworks, cultural traditions, and social transformations. Special emphasis is placed on the relational and evolving nature of craft skills, technological innovations, and the embodied growth of knowledge. Advanced computational approaches focussing on complexity, further illuminate patterns of mobility, resource use, and state formation.

Integrating archaeological, anthropological, and modeling perspectives, this volume offers an interdisciplinary and multi-scalar analysis of resources and their impact on societies in premodern times. It is intended for scholars, researchers, and advanced students in archaeology, anthropology, history, and related disciplines who are interested in material culture, environmental adaptation, cognitive processes, and the dynamics of complex societies.
Introduction. ReSoc- Resources in Societies
Maja Gori, Thomas Stöllner, Constance von Rüden

Lifeworlds in resource landscapes

1. Introduction: Lifeworlds in resource landscapes.
Thomas Stöllner

2. Resources as Life Worlds: How Do Material Resources Shape Cognition and
Culture?
Timothy M. LeCain

3. Resource-Scapes: Interwoven practices between appropriation and alienation
in premodern mining communities
Thomas Stöllner

4. Linked resources: The metallurgy-pastoralism nexus
Mark Pearce

5. Local Knowledge and Sacralisation of Resources in the Iron Age Apennines
(Italy). From Resource Landscapes to Resource Cultures.
Raffaella Da Vela

6. Technology and Social Dynamics of Mining in Bronze Age China
Yiu-Kang Hsu & Haichao Li

7. Urban Mining? A new look at taphonomic processes as key to the
reconstruction of waste and resource management in Late La Tène society
Milena Müller Kissing David Brönnimann, Johannes Wimmer, Barbara Stopp,
Hannele Rissanen, Norbert Spichtig

Skill, embodiment and the growth of knowledge

8. Introduction. Skill, embodiment and the growth of knowledge
Constance von Rüden & Maja Gori

9. Craft apprenticeship, craft innovation and the relational aspects of
skill
Nikolas Papadimitriou & Akis Goumas

10. The Anatomy of a Tradition
Christopher D. Buckley

11. Built from Paint: The Making of Architectural Simulations in the Wall
Paintings of Tell el-Daba
Johannes Jungfleisch

Resources and complex systems

12. Introduction: Resources and complex systems
Michail Roos

13. The Challenge of Interdisciplinarity in Agent-Based Modelling with
Particular Reference to Archaeology
Edmund Chattoe-Brown

14. Migration in the Cetina Phenomenon? An Agent Based Modelling Approach to
Reasons for Mobility in the Adriatic Area between 2500 and 2000 BC
Maja Gori & Frederik Schaff

15. Simulating resource exploitation strategies in Iron Age to Hellenistic
communities in southwest Anatolia
Dries Daems & Stef Boogers

16. A Model of the Emergence of the State
Martin Neumann
Maja Gori holds a PhD in Pre- and Protohistory and Aegean Archaeology from the University of Heidelberg, in cotutelle de thèse with the University of Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne. She has worked as a postdoctoral researcher at the Universities of Bochum, Heidelberg, Amsterdam, and Mainz. In 2017, she obtained the Habilitation as professor in Italy, and since 2018 she has held a permanent position as researcher at the CNR-ISPC (Institute for Heritage Science, Italian National Research Council), where she was promoted to senior researcher in 2024. In 2025, she was appointed Associate Professor of Pre- and Protohistory at the University of Trento. Her research focuses on prehistoric archaeology, particularly in the Balkans and Central Mediterranean. Her interests include mobility and cultural transmission, the relationship between identities and material culture, archaeological theory, network analysis, agent-based modelling, and the political uses of archaeology in present-day identity building. Key publications:

M. Gori, A. Hellmuth Kramberger, T. Krapf & G. Recchia (eds.) Archaeology of Mountainous Landscapes in Balkan Prehistory. Prähistorische Archäologie in Südosteuropa: Propylaeum 2026. M. Gori & A. Abar, 2022. Confronting Anthropological and Natural Scientific Approaches to Migration in Archaeology, in M. Fernández-Götz, C. Nimura, P. Stockhammer & R. Cartwright (eds.): Rethinking Migrations in Late Prehistoric Eurasia. Proceedings of the British Academy. Oxford University Press, Oxford M. Gori, A. Di Renzoni & E. Carletti 2021. Connecting the Dots in the Adriatic-Ionian Area. Long-Distance Networks in the 3rd Millennium BC. Origini XLV-2021: 147-170. A. Bulatovi, M.Gori & M. Vander Linden. Radiocarbon Dating the 3rd Millennium BC in the Central Balkans: a re-examination of the Early Bronze Age sequence, Radiocarbon 62.5, 2020: 11631191 M. Gori, K . Cetina communities on the move across the Central Mediterranean and the Balkans in the 3rd millennium BC. In: J. Maran, R. Bjenaru, S.C. Alinci, A.D. Popescu, S. Hansen (eds.), Objects, Ideas and Travelers. Contacts between the Balkans, the Aegean and Western Anatolia during the Bronze and Early Iron Age, Proc. Conf. to the memory of A. Vulpe, Bonn: Habelt, 2020, pp. 6583 M. Gori & M. Ivanova (eds.). Balkan Dialogues. Negotiating Identity Between Prehistory and the Present, London & New York: Routledge, 2017. M. Gori. Along the Rivers and Through the Mountains. A reviewed chrono-cultural framework for the south-western Balkans during the late 3rd and early 2nd millennium BCE, UPA, Bonn: Habelt, 2015. Constance von Rüden is currently junior professor for Prehistory at the Ruhr-University Bochum with a special focus on Mediterranean prehistory and theory. Previously she held post-doc positions at the German Archaeological Institute in Athens, at the Centre for Mediterranean Studies at Bochum and at Heidelberg University.

She has edited several volumes, published the wall paintings from Tall Mishrife/Qatna with an investigation of their interregional relations (2011) and issued the book Feasting, craft and depositional practice in Late Bronze Age Palaepaphos together with Artemis Georgiou, Ariane Jacobs and Paul Halstead. Since 2010, she has been co-director of the Tell el-Daba wall painting project in the eastern Nile Delta in Egypt (together with Manfred Bietak) and, since 2017, the director of a survey project in SantAntioco/Sardinia. Thomas Stöllner holds the Chair for Pre- and Protohistory at the Ruhr University Bochum in Germany and directs the Research Department and the Department of Mining Archaeology at the Deutsches Bergbau-Museum Bochum (DBM). His main area of research is the social and economic development of mining communities throughout pre- and protohistory with a focus on mining, the archaeometry of mining, and the archaeology of technology and social interrelations with the aid of studies in settlements and graveyards.

His research spans from Old World archaeology, including Central and Eastern Europe, to the Caucasus, the Middle East, and Central Asia, as well as South America.

ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8681-3632