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Reconstructing diachronic human history from synchronic anthropological data: the theory and practice of phylogenetics and network analysis

Brown bag seminar with Sean O'Neill (staff only)

Info about event

Time

Wednesday 27 February 2019,  at 12:00 - 13:00

Location

Moesgård, auditorium 1, 4206/117

ABSTRACT:

Systematic anthropological fieldwork can still be a vital source for actually understanding history over the longue durée. Recently scholars have reconciled an ongoing debate about which pattern predominates in human history, branching patterns or blending patterns, in this way: it is now understood that either pattern can predominate, depending upon different historically contingent factors, which must be investigated on a case-by-case basis.

A number of case studies will be discussed here, investigating the evolution of various culture traditions amongst populations of hunter-gatherer-fishers along the Pacific northwest coast of North America, during the Bantu expansion in Africa, and sub-arctic Siberia. Quantitative analyses based on a range of models and methods borrowed from the biological sciences for testing hypotheses relating to basic patterns of macro-scale cultural diversity are brought to bear on four levels of cultural tradition: material culture, technology, social structure and belief systems/cosmology. Additionally, the degree to which the transmission of culture traits has been constrained by other social traditions will be touched upon. The main thrust of Dr. O’Neill’s talk will be a renewed interest in systemic anthropological investigation as a very long-term scholarly investment in future knowledge.