Synopses & Reviews
<em>Cognitive Perspectives on Israelite Identity</em> breaks new ground in the study of ethnic identity in the ancient world through the articulation of an explicitly cognitive perspective. In presenting a view of ethnicity as an epistemological rather than an ontological entity, this work seeks to correct the pronounced tendency towards ‘analytical groupism' in the academic literature. Challenging what Pierre Bourdieu has called ‘our primary inclination to think the world in a substantialist manner,' this study seeks to break with the vernacular categories and ‘commonsense primordialisms' encoded within the Biblical texts, whilst at the same time accounting for their tenacious hold on our social and political imagination. It is the recognition of the performative and reifying potential of these categories of ethno-political practice that disqualifies their appropriation as categories of social analysis. >
Table of Contents
Acknowledgement Abbreviations Introduction Chapter One The Rise of the Concept of Race Social Evolution and Race Human Evolution and the Concept of Culture(s) Chapter Two Archaeology and Evolution Archaeology and the Question of National Identity: Gustav Kossinna Archaeology and Culture: V. Gordon Childe Archaeology and the Identity of Israel Chapter Three The Emergence of ‘Ethnicity' Primordialism and Instrumentalism in the Study of Ethnicity Chapter Four Cognitive Perspectives on Ethnicity and Identity Ethnicity as Cognition: Pierre Bourdieu Chapter Five The Loss of Innocence New Archaeology and the Ethnic Interpretation of Style Style as Active Comunication The Archaeology of Practice Chapter Six Biblical Archaeology and La Longue Durée Archaeology and Israelite Identity Israel in the Merneptah Stele ‘Israel' as an Essentialist Category of Social Cognition Chapter Seven Israelite Ethnicity and Biblical Archaeology Ethnic Sentiments in the Hebrew Bible The Hebrew Bible and the ‘Creation' of Israelite Identity Chapter Eight Ideology, Doxa, and the Boundaries of Israelite Identity Common Sense as Social Power Conclusion Bibliography