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Migrationism and diffusionism

The term migrationism, in the history of archaeological theory, was opposed to the term diffusionism (or "immobilism") as a means of distinguishing two approaches to explaining the spread of prehistoric archaeological cultures and innovations in artefact. Migrationism explains cultural change in terms of human migration, while diffusionism relies on explanations based on trans-cultural diffusion of ideas rather than populations (pots, not people[1]).

Western archaeology the first half of the 20th century relied on the assumption of migration and invasion as driving cultural change. That was criticized by the processualists in the 1960s and 1970s, leading to a new mainstream which rejected "migrationism" as outdated.[2] Since the 1990s, there has been renewed interest in "migrationist" scenarios, as archaeologists attempted the archaeological reflexes of migrations known to have occurred historically. Since the 2000s, the developments in archaeogenetics have opened a new avenue for investigation, based on the analysis of ancient DNA.

Kristiansen (1989) argued that the reasons for embracing "immobilism" during the Cold War era were ideological and derived from an emphasis on political solutions displacing military action.[3]

History

"Diffusionism", in its original use in the 19th and early 20th centuries, did not preclude migration or invasion. It was rather the term for assumption of any spread of cultural innovation, including by migration or invasion, as opposed "evolutionism", assuming the independent appearance of cultural innovation in a process of parallel evolution, termed "cultural evolutionism".

Opposition to migrationism as argued in the 1970s had an ideological component of anti-nationalism derived from Marxist archaeology, going back to V. Gordon Childe, who during the interwar period combined "evolutionism" and "diffusionism" and argued an intermediate position that each society developed in its own way but was strongly influenced by the spread of ideas from elsewhere. In contrast to Childe's moderate position, which allowed the diffusion of ideas and even moderate migration, Soviet archaeology adhered to a form of extreme evolutionism, which explained all cultural change from the class tensions internal to prehistoric societies.[4]

"Migrationism" fell from favour in mainstream western archeology in the 1970s. Adams (1978:483f.) described migrationism an "ad hoc explanation for cultural, linguistic, and racial change in such an extraordinary number of individual cases that to speak of a migrationist school of explanation seems wholly appropriate". Adams (p. 484) argued that the predominance of migrationism "down to the middle of the last [19th] century" could be explained because it "was and is the only explanation for culture change that can comfortably be reconciled with a literal interpretation of the Old Testament", and as such representing an outdated "creationist" view of prehistory, now to be challenged by "nonscriptural, anticreationist" views. Adams (p. 489) accepts only as "inescapable" migrationist scenarios that concern the first peopling of a region, such the first settlement of the Americas "by means of one or more migrations across the Bering land bridge" and "successive sweeps of Dorset and of Thule peoples across the Canadian Arctic".

While Adams criticized the migration of identifiable "peoples" or "tribes" was deconstructed as a "creationist" legacy based in biblical literalism, Smith (1966) had made a similar argument deconstructing the idea of "nations" or "tribes" as a "primordalistic" misconception based in modern nationalism.[5] Historian Alex Woolf notes that "in the minds of some scholars, immobilism was charged with a left-wing caché [sic]; those who showed too much interest in the ethnic or racial origin of the people they studied were, it was hinted, guilty of racist tendencies."[6]

While mainstream western archaeology maintained moderate scenarios of migrationism in spite of such criticism, it did move away from "invasionism". The mainstream view came to depict prehistoric cultural change as the result of gradual, limited migration of a small population that would consequently become influential in spreading new ideas but would contribute little to the succeeding culture's biological ancestry.

Thus, the mainstream position on the Neolithic Revolution in Europe as developed (notably by the German archaeologist Jens Lüning) since the 1980s, posits that "a small group of immigrants inducted the established inhabitants of Central Europe into sowing and milking" in a process spreading "in swift pace, in a spirit of 'peaceful cooperation'"[7] Migration was generally seen as being a slow process, involving family groups moving into new areas and settling amongst the native population, described as "demic diffusion" or "wave of advance", in which population would be essentially sedentary but expand by the colonisation of new territory by succeeding generations.

The question remained intractable until the arrival of archaeogenetics since the 1990s. The new field's rapid development since the 2000s has resulted in an increasing number of studies presenting quantitative estimates on the genetic impact of migrating populations. In several cases, that has led to a revival of the "invasionist" or "mass migration" scenario (in the case of the Neolithic Revolution in Europe[7]) or at least suggested that the extent of prehistoric migration had been underestimated (e.g. in the context of Indo-European expansion, it was estimated that the people of the Yamnaya culture in Eastern Europe contributed to 73% of the ancestry of individuals pertaining to the Corded Ware culture in Germany, and to about 40–54% to the ancestry of modern Central & Northern Europeans.[8][9])

In British archaeology, the debate between "migrationism" and "immobilism" has notably played out in reference to the example of the Anglo-Saxon settlement of Britain. The traditional view of the process, broadly supported by the available textual evidence, was that of a mass invasion in which the Anglo-Saxon incomers drove the native Romano-British inhabitants to the western fringes of the island. In the latter half of the 20th century, archaeologists pushed back against that view and allowed for only the movement of a small Anglo-Saxon "warrior elite", which gradually acculturated the Romano-Britons.[10][11] In recent years, however, a combination of factors (including present-day genetic studies of British populations and observable migrations), most scholars in Britain have returned to a more migrationist perspective and noted that the scale of both the settlement of the Anglo-Saxons and the survival of the Romano-Britons likely varied regionally.[12][13][14][15][16]

See also

References

  1. ^ Carol Kramer, "Pots and Peoples" in; Louis D. Levine and T. Culyer Young (eds.), Mountains and Lowlands: Essays in the Archaeology of Greater Mesopotamia; Malibu, Undena, 1977; cited in Serge Cleuziou, "Introduction", Objets et symboles: de la culture matérielle à l'espace culturel : actes de la 1re Journée doctorale d'archéologie, Paris, 20 mai 2006, ed. Laurent Dhennequin, Guillaume Gernez and Jessica Giraud, Paris: Sorbonne, 2009, ISBN 9782859446222, p. 18, n. 12.
  2. ^ Processual archaeology was further deconstructed by "Post-processual archaeology" which denied the possibility of ever forming objective conclusions based on archaeological evidence and denounced "materialist interpretations of the past" as being ethically and politically irresponsible.
  3. ^ "The Danish archaeologist Kristiansen (1989) has suggested that the reasons for the rising popularity of immobilism lie in post-war decolonialisation and in the development of the welfare state. In the public realm, this ledto an emphasis on political evolution rather than military solutions; in archaeology, this was translated into a belief in autochthonous development rather than 'invasions'." Härke (1998), citing Hills, C., "The Anglo-Saxon settlement of England. The state of research in Britain in the late 1980s", in: Ausgewählte Probleme europäischer Landnahmen des Früh- und Hochmittelalters, ed. M. Müller, (1993), p. 310. 13 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine.
  4. ^ "it was assumed that technologies develop because of internal contradictions within societies. This required that in any explanation of cultural change the principal emphasis had to be on the development of society. The standard series of technological ages was replaced by a unilinear sequence of social stages, each of which was characterised by distinctive productive forces, relations of production, and ideology. [...] Migration was ruled out as a mode of explaining changes in the archaeological record, and strong emphasis was placed on independent parallel development." Trigger, Bruce, Gordon Childe: Revolutions in Archaeology (1980), p 93
  5. ^ Anthony D. Smith, The Ethnic Origins of Nations (Oxford, 1966) pp. 6ff, coined the term "primordalistic" to separate these thinkers from those who view ethnicity as a situational construct.
  6. ^ Alex Woolf, From Pictland to Alba, 709-1070 (2007: Edinburgh University Press), pp. 291
  7. ^ a b Matthias Schulz, Neolithic Immigration: How Middle Eastern Milk Drinkers Conquered Europe, Spiegel Online (2010).
  8. ^ Zimmer, Karl (June 10, 2015). "DNA Deciphers Roots of Modern Europeans". New York Times.
  9. ^ "Nomadic herders left a strong genetic mark on Europeans and Asians", 10 June 2015, By Ann Gibbons, Science (AAAS)
  10. ^ Francis Pryor, Britain AD, 2004
  11. ^ Ward-Perkins, Bryan. "Why did the Anglo-Saxons not become more British?" The English Historical Review 115.462 (2000): page 523. 27 September 2021 at the Wayback Machine.
  12. ^ Dark, Ken R. (2003). "Large-scale population movements into and from Britain south of Hadrian's Wall in the fourth to sixth centuries AD" (PDF).
  13. ^ Toby F. Martin, The Cruciform Brooch and Anglo-Saxon England, Boydell and Brewer Press (2015), pp. 174-178
  14. ^ Härke, Heinrich. "Anglo-Saxon Immigration and Ethnogenesis". Medieval Archaeology 55.1 (2011): 1–28. 26 September 2021 at the Wayback Machine.
  15. ^ Catherine Hills, "The Anglo-Saxon Migration: An Archaeological Case Study of Disruption", in Migration and Disruptions: Toward a Unifying Theory of Ancient and Contemporary Migrations, ed. Brenda J. Baker and Takeyuki Tsuda (2015: University Press of Florida), pp. 47-48
  16. ^ Stuart Brookes and Susan Harrington, The Kingdom and People of Kent, AD 400-1066, p. 24
  • Adams, W Y; Gerven, D P V; Levy, R S (October 1978). "The Retreat from Migrationism". Annual Review of Anthropology. 7: 483–532. doi:10.1146/annurev.an.07.100178.002411.
  • John Chapman, Helena Hamerow, (eds.), Migrations and Invasions in Archaeological Explanation, Archaeopress, 1997, ISBN 9780860548577.
  • Kleinschmidt, Harald. People on the Move: Attitudes toward and Perceptions of Migration in Medieval and Modern Europe. Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 2003. Print.
  • Heinrich Härke, Archaeologists and Migrations, Current Anthropology Vol. 39, No. 1 (February 1998), pp. 19–46.
  • Finneran, N (2003). "The persistence of memory: national identity and migrationism: a case study from African and Ethiopian archaeology". Studies in Ethnicity and Nationalism. 3: 21–37. doi:10.1111/j.1754-9469.2003.tb00035.x. ISSN 1473-8481.
  • "Research History Relating to the Adoption and Expansion of Agrarian Practices and Societies". Acta Archaeologica. 85 (1): 11–29. 2014. doi:10.1111/j.1600-0390.2014.00922.x. Retrieved 1 March 2015.

External links

  • Razib Khan, (review of Peter Heather, Empires and Barbarians: The Fall of Rome and the Birth of Europe, 2010), Discover Magazine, 17 October 2010. Archived from the original on 3 January 2011.

migrationism, diffusionism, term, migrationism, history, archaeological, theory, opposed, term, diffusionism, immobilism, means, distinguishing, approaches, explaining, spread, prehistoric, archaeological, cultures, innovations, artefact, migrationism, explain. The term migrationism in the history of archaeological theory was opposed to the term diffusionism or immobilism as a means of distinguishing two approaches to explaining the spread of prehistoric archaeological cultures and innovations in artefact Migrationism explains cultural change in terms of human migration while diffusionism relies on explanations based on trans cultural diffusion of ideas rather than populations pots not people 1 Western archaeology the first half of the 20th century relied on the assumption of migration and invasion as driving cultural change That was criticized by the processualists in the 1960s and 1970s leading to a new mainstream which rejected migrationism as outdated 2 Since the 1990s there has been renewed interest in migrationist scenarios as archaeologists attempted the archaeological reflexes of migrations known to have occurred historically Since the 2000s the developments in archaeogenetics have opened a new avenue for investigation based on the analysis of ancient DNA Kristiansen 1989 argued that the reasons for embracing immobilism during the Cold War era were ideological and derived from an emphasis on political solutions displacing military action 3 Contents 1 History 2 See also 3 References 4 External linksHistory Edit Diffusionism in its original use in the 19th and early 20th centuries did not preclude migration or invasion It was rather the term for assumption of any spread of cultural innovation including by migration or invasion as opposed evolutionism assuming the independent appearance of cultural innovation in a process of parallel evolution termed cultural evolutionism Opposition to migrationism as argued in the 1970s had an ideological component of anti nationalism derived from Marxist archaeology going back to V Gordon Childe who during the interwar period combined evolutionism and diffusionism and argued an intermediate position that each society developed in its own way but was strongly influenced by the spread of ideas from elsewhere In contrast to Childe s moderate position which allowed the diffusion of ideas and even moderate migration Soviet archaeology adhered to a form of extreme evolutionism which explained all cultural change from the class tensions internal to prehistoric societies 4 Migrationism fell from favour in mainstream western archeology in the 1970s Adams 1978 483f described migrationism an ad hoc explanation for cultural linguistic and racial change in such an extraordinary number of individual cases that to speak of a migrationist school of explanation seems wholly appropriate Adams p 484 argued that the predominance of migrationism down to the middle of the last 19th century could be explained because it was and is the only explanation for culture change that can comfortably be reconciled with a literal interpretation of the Old Testament and as such representing an outdated creationist view of prehistory now to be challenged by nonscriptural anticreationist views Adams p 489 accepts only as inescapable migrationist scenarios that concern the first peopling of a region such the first settlement of the Americas by means of one or more migrations across the Bering land bridge and successive sweeps of Dorset and of Thule peoples across the Canadian Arctic While Adams criticized the migration of identifiable peoples or tribes was deconstructed as a creationist legacy based in biblical literalism Smith 1966 had made a similar argument deconstructing the idea of nations or tribes as a primordalistic misconception based in modern nationalism 5 Historian Alex Woolf notes that in the minds of some scholars immobilism was charged with a left wing cache sic those who showed too much interest in the ethnic or racial origin of the people they studied were it was hinted guilty of racist tendencies 6 While mainstream western archaeology maintained moderate scenarios of migrationism in spite of such criticism it did move away from invasionism The mainstream view came to depict prehistoric cultural change as the result of gradual limited migration of a small population that would consequently become influential in spreading new ideas but would contribute little to the succeeding culture s biological ancestry Thus the mainstream position on the Neolithic Revolution in Europe as developed notably by the German archaeologist Jens Luning since the 1980s posits that a small group of immigrants inducted the established inhabitants of Central Europe into sowing and milking in a process spreading in swift pace in a spirit of peaceful cooperation 7 Migration was generally seen as being a slow process involving family groups moving into new areas and settling amongst the native population described as demic diffusion or wave of advance in which population would be essentially sedentary but expand by the colonisation of new territory by succeeding generations The question remained intractable until the arrival of archaeogenetics since the 1990s The new field s rapid development since the 2000s has resulted in an increasing number of studies presenting quantitative estimates on the genetic impact of migrating populations In several cases that has led to a revival of the invasionist or mass migration scenario in the case of the Neolithic Revolution in Europe 7 or at least suggested that the extent of prehistoric migration had been underestimated e g in the context of Indo European expansion it was estimated that the people of the Yamnaya culture in Eastern Europe contributed to 73 of the ancestry of individuals pertaining to the Corded Ware culture in Germany and to about 40 54 to the ancestry of modern Central amp Northern Europeans 8 9 In British archaeology the debate between migrationism and immobilism has notably played out in reference to the example of the Anglo Saxon settlement of Britain The traditional view of the process broadly supported by the available textual evidence was that of a mass invasion in which the Anglo Saxon incomers drove the native Romano British inhabitants to the western fringes of the island In the latter half of the 20th century archaeologists pushed back against that view and allowed for only the movement of a small Anglo Saxon warrior elite which gradually acculturated the Romano Britons 10 11 In recent years however a combination of factors including present day genetic studies of British populations and observable migrations most scholars in Britain have returned to a more migrationist perspective and noted that the scale of both the settlement of the Anglo Saxons and the survival of the Romano Britons likely varied regionally 12 13 14 15 16 See also EditKulturkreis Stratum linguistics Sedentism Pre modern human migration List of invasions Invasions of the British Isles Indo European expansion Kurgan hypothesis Doric invasion Missionary Mongol invasions Nomadic empire Turkic expansionReferences Edit Carol Kramer Pots and Peoples in Louis D Levine and T Culyer Young eds Mountains and Lowlands Essays in the Archaeology of Greater Mesopotamia Malibu Undena 1977 cited in Serge Cleuziou Introduction Objets et symboles de la culture materielle a l espace culturel actes de la 1re Journee doctorale d archeologie Paris 20 mai 2006 ed Laurent Dhennequin Guillaume Gernez and Jessica Giraud Paris Sorbonne 2009 ISBN 9782859446222 p 18 n 12 Processual archaeology was further deconstructed by Post processual archaeology which denied the possibility of ever forming objective conclusions based on archaeological evidence and denounced materialist interpretations of the past as being ethically and politically irresponsible The Danish archaeologist Kristiansen 1989 has suggested that the reasons for the rising popularity of immobilism lie in post war decolonialisation and in the development of the welfare state In the public realm this ledto an emphasis on political evolution rather than military solutions in archaeology this was translated into a belief in autochthonous development rather than invasions Harke 1998 citing Hills C The Anglo Saxon settlement of England The state of research in Britain in the late 1980s in Ausgewahlte Probleme europaischer Landnahmen des Fruh und Hochmittelalters ed M Muller 1993 p 310 Archived 13 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine it was assumed that technologies develop because of internal contradictions within societies This required that in any explanation of cultural change the principal emphasis had to be on the development of society The standard series of technological ages was replaced by a unilinear sequence of social stages each of which was characterised by distinctive productive forces relations of production and ideology Migration was ruled out as a mode of explaining changes in the archaeological record and strong emphasis was placed on independent parallel development Trigger Bruce Gordon Childe Revolutions in Archaeology 1980 p 93 Anthony D Smith The Ethnic Origins of Nations Oxford 1966 pp 6ff coined the term primordalistic to separate these thinkers from those who view ethnicity as a situational construct Alex Woolf From Pictland to Alba 709 1070 2007 Edinburgh University Press pp 291 a b Matthias Schulz Neolithic Immigration How Middle Eastern Milk Drinkers Conquered Europe Spiegel Online 2010 Zimmer Karl June 10 2015 DNA Deciphers Roots of Modern Europeans New York Times Nomadic herders left a strong genetic mark on Europeans and Asians 10 June 2015 By Ann Gibbons Science AAAS Francis Pryor Britain AD 2004 Ward Perkins Bryan Why did the Anglo Saxons not become more British The English Historical Review 115 462 2000 page 523 Archived 27 September 2021 at the Wayback Machine Dark Ken R 2003 Large scale population movements into and from Britain south of Hadrian s Wall in the fourth to sixth centuries AD PDF Toby F Martin The Cruciform Brooch and Anglo Saxon England Boydell and Brewer Press 2015 pp 174 178 Harke Heinrich Anglo Saxon Immigration and Ethnogenesis Medieval Archaeology 55 1 2011 1 28 Archived 26 September 2021 at the Wayback Machine Catherine Hills The Anglo Saxon Migration An Archaeological Case Study of Disruption in Migration and Disruptions Toward a Unifying Theory of Ancient and Contemporary Migrations ed Brenda J Baker and Takeyuki Tsuda 2015 University Press of Florida pp 47 48 Stuart Brookes and Susan Harrington The Kingdom and People of Kent AD 400 1066 p 24 Adams W Y Gerven D P V Levy R S October 1978 The Retreat from Migrationism Annual Review of Anthropology 7 483 532 doi 10 1146 annurev an 07 100178 002411 John Chapman Helena Hamerow eds Migrations and Invasions in Archaeological Explanation Archaeopress 1997 ISBN 9780860548577 Kleinschmidt Harald People on the Move Attitudes toward and Perceptions of Migration in Medieval and Modern Europe Westport Conn Praeger 2003 Print Heinrich Harke Archaeologists and Migrations Current Anthropology Vol 39 No 1 February 1998 pp 19 46 Finneran N 2003 The persistence of memory national identity and migrationism a case study from African and Ethiopian archaeology Studies in Ethnicity and Nationalism 3 21 37 doi 10 1111 j 1754 9469 2003 tb00035 x ISSN 1473 8481 Research History Relating to the Adoption and Expansion of Agrarian Practices and Societies Acta Archaeologica 85 1 11 29 2014 doi 10 1111 j 1600 0390 2014 00922 x Retrieved 1 March 2015 External links EditRazib Khan Volkerwanderung back with a vengeance review of Peter Heather Empires and Barbarians The Fall of Rome and the Birth of Europe 2010 Discover Magazine 17 October 2010 Archived from the original on 3 January 2011 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Migrationism and diffusionism amp oldid 1097481763, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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