Affiliation:
1. University of Toronto
2. Arizona State University
Abstract
In this paper, we view creativity through the lens of innovation, a concept familiar to archaeologists across a range of contexts
and theoretical perspectives. Most attempts to understand ancient innovation thus far, we argue, have been limited by their lack
of capacity to cope with the multiple scales of innovation: Those that track widespread changes, like the beginnings of
metallurgy, fail to account for the changes experiences by individual craftspeople; those that do justice to the details of the
micro-scale, with ‘thick’ description, cannot well explain the regional adoption of new practices. Here we develop an intermediary
position, at the meso-scale, which we hope can serve to integrate these different scales. It is based on the notions that all
innovation entails learning (and hence cognitive transformations) and that learning is very often supported at this meso-scale,
through ‘communities of practice’. Drawing on the ethno-archaeological literature in particular, we emphasise how learning is a
process of embodied cognition. Our archaeological case study is then drawn from the Bronze Age east Mediterranean, where a
striking innovation in pottery making — the use of rotative kinetic energy via the potter’s wheel — sees a very uneven uptake from
region to region over the course of many centuries. We propose certain differences in community organization from one region to
another that might account for such variation in the adoption of an innovation, with the island of Crete in particular seeing a
much more stable trajectory of adoption than many of its neighbouring areas.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
History and Philosophy of Science,Behavioral Neuroscience,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics,General Computer Science
Cited by
27 articles.
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