摘要:Ornaments are polysemic objects due to different meanings they convey in human societies—self-embellishment,
means of exchange, markers of age and gender, indicators of social status, signs of power, non-verbal means of
expression and communication. Beads have a privileged place in shedding light on the origins of modern cognition
in human societies. While archaeological approaches to ancient symbolism have often been concerned with
behavioral modernity of our species, anthropological studies have underlined the role of ornaments in the construction
of personhood, identity, and social networks in traditional societies.
Exploring an approach informed by anthropological and ethnographic theory, we discuss Paleolithic and Mesolithic
bodily adornments found across southeastern Europe. We present a review of the evidence for long-term
regional and diachronic differences and similarities in types of body adornment among prehistoric foragers of the
region. Here we look at aspects of cultural transmission and transferability over time. This enables us to reconstruct
a series of gestures involved in ornament manufacture and use, and to examine transmissions of technological
know-hows, shifting aesthetic values, and demands for specific local and non-local materials, including marine
shells transferred across this region over long distances (>400km). This evidence is further discussed by, on the
one hand, taking a perspective that draws on emic understandings of ornaments in certain ethnographic contexts
and, on the other hand, through a rethinking of the relevance of the structural anthropological mode of analysis
championed by Lévi-Strauss.
This special issue is guest-edited by Daniella E. Bar-Yosef Mayer (Steinhardt Museum of Natural History and
Institute of Archaeology, Tel Aviv University) and Marjolein D. Bosch (McDonald Institute for Archaeological
Research, University of Cambridge). This is article #12 of 12.