Bioarchaeology of frontiers and borderlands /

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Bibliographic Details
Imprint:Gainesville, FL : University of Florida Press, 2019.
Description:xv, 295 pages : illustrations, maps ; 25 cm.
Language:English
Series:Bioarchaeological Interpretations of the Human Past: Local, Regional, and Global Perspectives
Bioarchaeological interpretations of the human past.
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Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11936908
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Other authors / contributors:Tica, Cristina I., editor.
Martin, Debra L. (Professor of Biological Anthropology), editor.
Larsen, Clark Spencer, writer of foreword.
ISBN:9781683400844
1683400844
Notes:Includes bibliographical references and index.
Summary:This edited volume presents a series of cases addressing how living on or interacting with the frontier can affect health and socioeconomic status. This book aims to explore how different groups stuck in these zones were affected, how they interacted with the different worlds, how they lived their lives on the "edge". This volume also aims to emphasize the ways that frontiers and borderlands are liminal zones that demand a reconceptualization of many of our most deeply held assumptions about the relationships between people-place identity and culture.
Description
Summary:

Frontiers and territorial borders are places of contested power where societies collide, interact, and interconnect. Using bioanthropological case studies from around the world, this volume explores how people in the past created, maintained, or changed their identities while living on the edge between two or more different spheres of influence.

Examining a wide range of borderland settings, essays in this volume discuss the mobility of people in Roman Egypt and investigate patterns of genetic difference in Iron Age Italy. They show how social and cultural interactions helped buffer the stressful physical environment of eleventh-century Iceland and describe bioarchaeological evidence of traumatic injuries indicating tension across regional borders in the precontact American Great Basin and Southwest. Contributors look at isotope data, skeletal stress markers, craniometric and dental metric information, mortuary arrangements, and other evidence to examine how frontier life can affect health and socioeconomic status. Illustrating the many meanings and definitions of frontiers and borderlands, they question assumptions about the relationships between people, place, and identity.

As national borders continue to ignite controversy in today?s society and politics, the research presented here is more important than ever. The long history of people who have lived in borderland areas helps us understand the challenges of adapting to these dynamic and often violent places.

A volume in the series Bioarchaeological Interpretations of the Human Past: Local, Regional, and Global Perspectives, edited by Clark Spencer Larsen

Physical Description:xv, 295 pages : illustrations, maps ; 25 cm.
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:9781683400844
1683400844