Nyamushosho Robert T, Chipangura Njabulo, Pasipanodya Takudzwa B, Bandama Foreman, Chirikure Shadreck, Manyanga Munyaradzi
Materials Laboratory, Department of Archaeology, University of Cape Town, South Africa.
Centre for Urbanism and Built Environment Studies (CUBES), University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Heliyon. 2021 Mar 31;7(3):e06609. doi: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2021.e06609. eCollection 2021 Mar.
Ancient pottery from the Nyanga agricultural complex (CE 1300-1900) in north-eastern Zimbabwe enjoys more than a century of archaeological research. Though several studies dedicated to the pottery have expanded the frontiers of knowledge about the peopling of Bantu-speaking agropastoral societies in this part of southern Africa, we know little about the social context in which the pottery was made, distributed, used, and discarded in everyday life. This mostly comes from the fact that the majority of the ceramic studies undertaken were rooted in Eurocentric typological approaches to material culture hence these processes were elided by most researchers. As part of the decolonial turn in African archaeology geared at rethinking our current understanding of the everyday life of precolonial agropastoral societies, we explored the lifecycle of traditional pottery among the Manyika, one of the local communities historically connected to the Nyanga archaeological landscape. The study proffered new dimensions to the previous typological analyses. It revealed a range of everyday roles and cultural contexts that probably shaped the lifecycle of local pottery in ancient Nyanga.
来自津巴布韦东北部尼扬加农业区(公元1300 - 1900年)的古代陶器已有一个多世纪的考古研究历史。尽管有几项专门针对这些陶器的研究拓展了我们对南部非洲这一地区说班图语的农牧社会人口迁徙的认识,但对于陶器在日常生活中制作、分发、使用和丢弃的社会背景,我们却知之甚少。这主要是因为大多数已开展的陶瓷研究都植根于以欧洲为中心的物质文化类型学方法,因此这些过程被大多数研究者忽略了。作为非洲考古学去殖民化转向的一部分,旨在重新思考我们目前对殖民前农牧社会日常生活的理解,我们探究了与尼扬加考古景观有着历史联系的当地社区之一马扬伊卡人传统陶器的生命周期。这项研究为之前的类型学分析提供了新的维度。它揭示了一系列可能塑造古代尼扬加当地陶器生命周期的日常角色和文化背景。