Books

Books : reviews

Andrew Sherratt.
The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Archaeology.
CUP. 1980

Norman Yoffee, Andrew Sherratt.
Archaeological Theory: Who Sets the Agenda?.
CUP. 1993

Since the 1960s, archaeology has become increasingly taught in universities and practised on a growing scale by national and local heritage agencies throughout the world. This book addresses the criticisms of post-modernist writers about its social role, and asserts its intellectual importance and achievements in discovering real facts about the human past, which are common to all thinking people. It looks forward to the creation of a truly global consciousness of the origins of human societies and civilizations.

Andrew Sherratt.
Economy and Society in Prehistoric Europe: changing perspectives.
Princeton University Press. 1997

This book brings together a classic collection of Andrew Sherratt’s work on the economic foundations of prehistoric Europe, which have put forward important new ideas about the development of farming, pastoralism, early technology and trade. In a series of contributions that have included wide-ranging syntheses and detailed local studies, he discusses their implications for the understanding of settlement-patterns, social structures, material culture, and less tangible aspects of prehistoric life such as the spread of languages and the use of narcotics.

While the author’s earlier studies concentrated on topics such as subsistence and demography, the later ones have sought more sophisticated ways of dealing with consumption and value. One of the most interesting aspects of the volume is the way in which he looks back over these changes, and sets them in the context of Europe’s image of itself as it has altered over recent decades and centuries.