Isochrestism and style: A clarification

https://doi.org/10.1016/0278-4165(86)90008-5Get rights and content

Abstract

The literature of style and ethnicity in archaeology exhibits growing confusion regarding the meaning of the term isochrestism introduced by Sackett. Its original, and correct, usage concerns the notion that ethnic style is a latent quality that potentially resides in all formal variation in material culture, including varition regarded as purely functional in the utilitarian sense. Progressively, however, the term has become wrongly identified with Sackett's more general argument regarding style, which concerns as much the issue of its behavioral background as the issue of where it resides. Here the distinction between isochrestism and Sackett's broader position is clarified and both in turn are brought into relation with the major questions currently being debated by students of ethnic style.

References (14)

  • Wiesnner Polly

    Style and social information in Kalahari San projectile points

    American Antiquity

    (1983)
    Wiessner Polly

    Reconsidering the behavioral basis for style: A case study among the Kalahari San

    Journal of Anthropological Archaeology

    (1984)
    Wiessner Polly

    Style or isochrestic variation? A reply to Sackett

    American Antiquity

    (1985)
  • Lewis W. Binford

    Archaeological systematics and the study of cultural process

    American Antiquity

    (1965)
    Lewis W. Binford

    Contemporary model building: Paradigms and the current state of Paleolithic research

    Lewis W. Binford

    An Alyawara day: Making men's knives and beyond

    American Antiquity

    (1986)
  • Lewis R. Binford et al.

    A preliminary analysis of functional variability in the Mousterian of Levallois facies

    American Anthropologist

    (1966)
  • Margaret W. Conkey

    Style and information in cultural evolution: Toward a predictive model for the Paleolithic

  • Larick Roy

    Spears, style, and time among Maa-speaking pastoralists

    Journal of Anthropological Archaeology

    (1985)
  • John R. Rick

    Prehistoric hunters of the high Andes

    (1980)
There are more references available in the full text version of this article.

Cited by (0)

View full text