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Normative model of culture

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As a consequence of the assumption that cultural norms were expressed in material remains, the normative model equates an archaeological culture with a human culture. By no means all traits are required to be similar for a site to be considered part of a certain larger culture. A site can lack a
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The normative model is often criticized as being mainly descriptive. It does not explain why a certain cultural norm exists, but rather describes that it exists. The normative model fitted well with an archaeology which was largely concerned with simply collecting data.
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The normative model of culture assumes that a culture consists of a set of norms. These norms are ideas on all aspects of a society. It then goes on to assume that the norms are expressed in material remains of a society. A simple example of this is the norm that
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typical form of architecture, yet present numerous other characteristic traits (such as a particular style of pottery) that identify it as a society that was part of a larger cultural sphere.
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Criticism focussed mainly on the model's lacking abilities to explain rather than describe, to generalize rather than particularize and to understand change in societies.
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outside the settlement. This norm is expressed in the material record, and can be discovered by archaeologists who excavate a field of
125: 143: 24: 47: 43: 8: 121: 50:. Some argue that current views of culture history are simplified and attack a 137: 32: 28: 51: 39:. In essence it defines culture as a set of shared ideas, or norms. 68: 36: 64: 72: 135: 42:The normative model was the dominant model in 75:outside a settlement of the same period. 27:, a theoretical approach to cultures in 16:Theoretical approach to ancient cultures 136: 118:Archaeological Theory: An Introduction 112: 110: 108: 106: 104: 57: 13: 14: 155: 101: 1: 94: 82: 7: 10: 160: 21:normative model of culture 120:, Blackwell Publishing, 23:is the central model in 67:should be buried in a 48:processual archaeology 144:Archaeological theory 44:archaeological theory 116:Johnson, M. (1999). 46:up to the rise of 126:978-1-4051-0015-1 58:Basic assumptions 151: 128: 114: 159: 158: 154: 153: 152: 150: 149: 148: 134: 133: 132: 131: 115: 102: 97: 85: 60: 25:culture history 17: 12: 11: 5: 157: 147: 146: 130: 129: 99: 98: 96: 93: 84: 81: 59: 56: 15: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 156: 145: 142: 141: 139: 127: 123: 119: 113: 111: 109: 107: 105: 100: 92: 89: 80: 76: 74: 70: 66: 65:human remains 55: 53: 49: 45: 40: 38: 34: 30: 26: 22: 117: 90: 86: 77: 61: 41: 33:anthropology 20: 18: 29:archaeology 95:References 83:Criticism 52:straw man 138:Category 69:cemetery 73:burials 37:history 124:  122:ISBN 35:and 19:The 140:: 103:^ 54:. 31:,

Index

culture history
archaeology
anthropology
history
archaeological theory
processual archaeology
straw man
human remains
cemetery
burials





ISBN
978-1-4051-0015-1
Category
Archaeological theory

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