The Oxford Handbook of Archaeology and Language

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  • 電子書籍
  • ポイントキャンペーン

The Oxford Handbook of Archaeology and Language

  • 著者名:Robbeets, Martine (EDT)/Hudson, Mark (EDT)
  • 価格 ¥42,309 (本体¥38,463)
  • OUP Oxford(2025/09/15発売)
  • 2026年も読書三昧!Kinoppy電子書籍・電子洋書 全点ポイント30倍キャンペーン(~1/12)
  • ポイント 11,520pt (実際に付与されるポイントはご注文内容確認画面でご確認下さい)
  • 言語:ENG
  • eISBN:9780192694560

ファイル: /

Description

This volume provides a comprehensive and up-to-date overview of how archaeology, genes, and language can be combined to shed light on the human past. Our understanding of human prehistory has been revolutionized in recent years by the growth of interdisciplinary perspectives, and particularly by insights from the study of ancient DNA. At a time when the 'Big Data' movement in genetics and archaeology is beginning to make inroads into linguistics, The Oxford Handbook of Archaeology and Language sets the agenda for future research in the discipline of archaeolinguistics.The handbook is divided into three parts. The first part introduces the basic frameworks of archaeolinguistics, addressing recent trends and new perspectives. Chapters in Part II explore the application of archaeolinguistics to different stages in human history, from hunter-gathering via the adoption of farming and the rise of writing to modern times. Part III features regional case studies from different parts of the world, including not only Indo-European but also Uralic, Transeurasian, Sino-Tibetan, Paleosiberian, Tai-Kadai, Austronesian, Papuan, Australian, Afrasian, Nilo-Saharan, Niger-Congo, Kalahari Basin, Andean, and Lowland South American languages. In illustrating the extent to which linguistic, archaeological, and genetic histories align or differ, the volume goes beyond the level of 'broad brush' approaches by engaging specialists from a range of disciplines as co-authors, shedding light on language dynamics from multiple perspectives.

Table of Contents

  • Part I. Archaeology, Genes, and Language: Basic Frameworks
  • 1: Martine Robbeets: Archaeolinguistics: Combining archaeology, genes, and language
  • 2: Mark Pagel: Language in human evolution
  • 3: Russell Barlow and Lyle Campbell: Historical comparative linguistics and language classification
  • 4: Bethwyn Evans: Prehistoric language contact
  • 5: Patience Epps and Olesya Khanina: Cultural reconstruction: How to infer the cultural environment of ancestral speakers?
  • 6: Søren Wichmann: Linguistic phylogeography
  • 7: Michael Dunn: Linguistic dating
  • 8: Peter Bakker: Prehistoric language change in social context
  • 9: Rune Iversen and Felix Riede: Culture change in archaeology
  • 10: Paul Heggarty and Adam Powell: Bayesian phylogenetics in language prehistory - and archaeology
  • 11: Chiara Barbieri and Paul Widmer: Advances in population genetics and language history: How large datasets and ancient DNA changed the picture
  • 12: Ruth Mace: The relationship between genetics, language, and culture
  • Part II. Archaeology, Genes, and Language across Time
  • 13: Nicholas Evans: Archaeolinguistics and the languages of hunter-gatherers
  • 14: Peter Bellwood: Farming and language dispersals consequent upon the oldest developments of food production
  • 15: Mark Hudson, Rasmus Bjørn, and Robert Spengler: Bronze Age and languages
  • 16: Haicheng Wang: Ancient states and the rise of writing
  • 17: Mark Hudson, James Harland, and Alison Crowther: Archaeology and language dynamics in the medieval and early modern eras
  • 18: Martine Robbeets and Mark Hudson: Language and the Anthropocene
  • Part III. Archaeology, Genes, and Language across Space
  • 19: Alexander Lubotsky and Tijmen Pronk: Indo-European archaeolinguistics
  • 20: Outi Vesakoski, Elina Salmela, and Henny Piezonka: Uralic archaeolinguistics
  • 21: Martine Robbeets, Mark Hudson, and Chao Ning: Transeurasian archaeolinguistics
  • 22: Ben Potter and Edward Vajda: Palaeosiberian archaeolinguistics
  • 23: David Bradley, Li Liu, Chao Ning, and Rita Dal Martello: Sino-Tibetan archaeolinguistics
  • 24: Jian-Xin Guo, Zhi-Quan Fan, Wen-Jiao Yang, and Chuan-Chao Wang: Tai-Kadai archaeolinguistics
  • 25: Matthew Spriggs, Paul Geraghty, and Yue-Chen Liu: Austronesian archaeolinguistics
  • 26: Antoinette Schapper, Dylan Gaffney, and Nicolas Brucato: Archaeolinguistics of Papuan languages
  • 27: Claire Bowern, Bastien Llamas, Luisa Miceli, Raymond Tobler, and Peter Veth: Australian archaeolinguistics
  • 28: Christopher Ehret, David Schoenburn, Steven A. Brandt, and Shomarka O. Y. Keita: Afrasian archaeolinguistics
  • 29: Gerrit J. Dimmendaal and Hiba Babiker: Nilo-Saharan archaeolinguistics
  • 30: Koen Bostoen, Peter Coutros, and Carina Schlebusch: Niger-Congo archaeolinguistics, including Bantu
  • 31: Tom Güldemann, Andrew Smith, and Vladimir Bajic: The archaeolinguistics of Kalahari Basin area languages
  • 32: Matthias Urban, Chiara Barbieri, and Kurt Rademaker: Archaeolinguistics of the languages of the Andes
  • 33: Rik van Gijn, Leonardo Arias, and Jonas Gregorio de Souza: Archaeolinguistics of language families and contact areas of Amazonia

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