Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-7cvxr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-28T05:09:15.702Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Jomon archaeology and the representation of Japanese origins

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

Junko Habu
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, 232 Kroeber Hall, University of California, Berkeley CA 94720-3710, USA. [email protected]
Clare Fawcett
Affiliation:
Department of Sociology & Anthropology, St. Francis Xavier University, P.O. Box 5000, Antigonish NS, Canada B2G 2W5 [email protected]

Extract

Since 1992, on-going excavations of the Early to Middle Jomon period Sannai Maruyama site (3500-2000 BC) have uncovered the large size and complexity of this prehistoric hunter-gatherer settlement.

Type
Special section
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd. 1999

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Aikens, C. & Higuchi, T.. 1982. Prehistory of Japan. San Diego (CA): Academic Press.Google Scholar
Barnes, G. 1993. China, Korea and Japan: The rise of civilization in East Asia. London: Thames & Hudson.Google Scholar
Befu, H. 1984. Civilization and culture: Japan in search of identity, in Umesao, T., Befu, H. & Kreiner, J. (ed.), Japanese civilization and the modern world: Life and society. 5975. Osaka: National Museum of Ethnography. Senri Ethnological series 16.Google Scholar
Befu, H. 1993a. Cultural nationalism in East Asia. Berkeley (CA): Institute of East Asian Studies, University of California.Google Scholar
Befu, H. 1993b. Nationalism and nihonjinron: representation and identity, in Befu, (ed.): 10535.Google Scholar
Bleed, P. 1989. Foreign archaeologists in Japan, Archaeological Review from Cambridge 8(1): 1926.Google Scholar
Denoon, D., Hudson, M. McCormack, G. & Morris-Suzuki, T.. 1996. Multicultural Japan: Paleolithic to Postmodern. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Edwards, W. 1991. Buried discourse: the Toro archaeological site and Japanese national identity in the early postwar period, Journal of Japanese Studies 17(1): 123.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Edwards, W. 1996. In pursuit of Himiko: Postwar archaeology and the location of Yamatai, Monumenta Nipponica 51(1): 5379.Google Scholar
Edwards, W. 1997a. Review of OblasPerspectives on race and culture in Japanese society: The mass media and ethnicity, Journal of Japanese Studies 23(1): 2347.Google Scholar
Edwards, W. 1997b. Japan’s new past: how a century of archaeology helped dispel a nation’s mythic origins, Archaeology 50(2): 3212.Google Scholar
Fawcett, C. 1990. A study of the socio-political context of Japanese archaeology. Unpublished Ph.D dissertation, Department of Anthropology, McGill University.Google Scholar
Fawcett, C. 1995. Nationalism and postwar Japanese archeology, in Kohl, P. & Fawcett, C. (ed.), Nationalism, politics, and the practice of archaeology: 23248. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Fawcett, C. 1996. Archaeology and Japanese identity, in Denoon, et al. (ed.): 6080.Google Scholar
Fawcett, C. & Habu, J.. 1990. Education and archaeology in Japan, in Stone, P. & MacKenzie, R. (ed.), The excluded past: Archaeology in education: 21732. London: Unwin Hyman.Google Scholar
Fujitani, T. 1993. Inventing, forgetting, remembering: toward a historical ethnography of the nation-state, in Befu, (ed.): 77106.Google Scholar
Gluck, C. 1985. Japan’s modern myths: Ideology in the Late Meiji period. Princeton (NJ): Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Habu, J. 1989. Contemporary Japanese archaeology and society, Archaeological Review from Cambridge 8(1): 3645.Google Scholar
Hanazaki, K. 1996. Ainu Mosher and Yaponesia: Ainu and Okinawan identities in contemporary Japan, in Denoon, et al. (ed.): 11734.Google Scholar
Hanihara, K. 1991. Dual structure model for the population history of the Japanese, Japan Review 2: 133.Google Scholar
Ikawa-Smith, F. 1975. Japanese ancestors and paleolithic archaeology, Asian Perspectives 18(1): 1525.Google Scholar
Ikawa-Smith, F. 1982. Co-traditions in Japanese archaeology, World Archaeology 13(3): 296309.Google Scholar
Ikawa-Smith, F. 1990. The ideology of cultural homogeneity in the prehistoric Japanese archipelago (L’idéologie de l’homogénéité culturelle dans l’archéologie préhistorique japonaise), Anthropologie et Société 14(3): 5176. (In French.)Google Scholar
Ikawa-Smith, F. 1995. The Jomon, the Ainu, and the Okinawans: the changing politics of ethnic identity in Japanese archeology, in Dicks, D. (ed.), Communicating with Japan: Images past, present, and future: 4356. Montreal: Concordia University.Google Scholar
Imamura, K. 1996. Prehistoric Japan. Honolulu (HI): University of Hawaii Press.Google Scholar
Kaner, S. 1996. Beyond ethnicity and emergence in Japanese archaeology, in Denoon, et al. (ed.): 4659.Google Scholar
Kimura, M. 1998. Aomori Prefectural cultural tourism establishment declaration (Aomori Ken Bunka Kanko Riken Sengen). Aomori Prefectural pamphlet. (In Japanese.)Google Scholar
Kondo, Y. 1985. Reflections on future directions on postwar Japanese archaeology (Sengo nihon kokogaku no hansei to kadai), in Kondo, Y., Introduction to Japanese archaeological studies (Nihon Kokogaku Kenkyu Josetsu): 44487. Tokyo: Iwanami. (In Japanese.)Google Scholar
Mouer, R. & Sugimoto, Y.. 1983. Images of Japanese society: A study in the social construction of reality. London: Kegan Paul.Google Scholar
Oblas, P. 1995. Perspectives on race and culture in Japanese society: The mass media and ethnicity. Lewiston (NY): Edwin Mellen Press.Google Scholar
Okada, Y. 1994. Discovery of a large settlement (Sugata o arawashita kyodai shuraku), Weekly Asahigraph (25 October 1994): 5663. (In Japanese.)Google Scholar
Okada, Y. 1998. Changes in intrasite settlement patterns at the Sannai Maruyama site (Sannai Maruyama iseki no shuraku hensen). Paper presented at the 8th International Conference on Hunting and Gathering Societies, 25 October 1998, Aomori, Japan. (In Japanese.)Google Scholar
Okada, Y & Habu, J.. 1995. Public presentation and archaeological research: A case study from the Jomon Period Sannai Maruyama site. Paper presented at the 1995 Chacmool Conference, Calgary.Google Scholar
Okada, Y., Koyama, S. & Ichikawa, K.. 1996. Local people’s support of Jomon cultural studies (Shimin ga sasaera Jomon bunka), in Okada, Y. & Koyama, S. (ed.), Discussion about the Jomon period: The world of Sannai Maruyama (Jomon Teidan: Sannai Maruyama no Sekai): 199216. Tokyo: Yamakawa Shuppan Sha. (In Japanese.)Google Scholar
Okamura, M. 1995. The Sannai Maruyama site (Sannai Maruyama iseki), in Agency for Cultural Affairs (ed.), Excavation of the Japanese archipelago: New archaeological discoveries in 1995 [Hakkutsu Sareta Nihon Retto: ’95 Shin-hakken Koko Sokuho): 2025. Tokyo: Asahi Shinbun-sha. (In Japanese.)Google Scholar
Okamura, M. 1997. Buried cultural properties administration: my 15 years in archaeology (Maibun gyosei: kokogaku to watashi no 15 nen), Gekkan Bunkazai Hakkutsu Shutsudo Joho December 1997. (In Japanese.)Google Scholar
Ohnuki-Tierney, E. 1993. Rice as self : Japanese identities through time. Princeton (NJ): Princeton University: Press.Google Scholar
Pearson, R.J. 1992. Ancient Japan. Washington (DC): Smithsonian Institution, Arthur M. Sackler Gallery.Google Scholar
Porter, B. 1997. Concepts of nationalism in history, in Van, Home (ed.): 93114.Google Scholar
Sako, K. 1996. Takamatsuzuka Kofun, in Asahi Graph (ed.), Review of archaeological excavations over the past 50 years (Sengo Goju Nen: Kodaishi Hakkutsu So-makuri): 11519. Tokyo: Asahi Shinbunsha. (In Japanese.)Google Scholar
Sugimoto, Y & Mouer, R.. 1989. Constructs for understanding Japan. London. Kegan Paul International.Google Scholar
Tanaka, M. 1984. Japan, in Cleere, H. (ed.), Approaches to the archaeological heritage: 8388. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
To’o Nippo, Sha. 1997. The Sannai Maruyama Site, New Edition (Shinpan Sannai Maruyama Iseki). Aomori: To’o Nippo Sha. (In Japanese.)Google Scholar
Tsude, H. 1995. Archaeological theory in Japan, in Ucko, P. (ed.) Theory in archaeology: A world perspective: 298311. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Umehara, T. 1995. The ancestral home of the spirit of the Japanese people (Nihonjin no seishin no kokyo), in Umehara, T. & Yasuda, Y. (ed.), Discovery of the Jomon civilization: Amazing discoveries at the Sannai Maruyama site (Jomon Bunmei no Hakken: Kyoi no Sannai Maruyama Iseki): 1230. Tokyo: PHP Kenkyujo. (In Japanese.)Google Scholar
Umesao, T., Koyama, S. & Okada, Y.. 1995. Image of a city-Sannai Maruyama (Nihon no rekishi wa Sannai Maruyama kara hajimaru), Sannai Maruyama Jomon Era File 3: 38. (In English and Japanese.)Google Scholar
Van Horne, W.A. (ed.). 1997. Global convulsions: Race, ethnicity, and nationalism at the end of the twentieth century. Albany (NY): State University of New York.Google Scholar
Wajima, S. 1973. The scholarly significance of the Tsukinowa Kofun excavation (Tsukinowa Kofun no gakumon teki igi o chusin ni), in Wajima, S., The scientific spirit and development of Japanese archaeology (Nihon Kokogaku no Hattatsu to kagakuteki seishi): 66480. Okayama: Wajima Seiichi Chosaku shu kanko’okai. (In Japanese.)Google Scholar
Yoshino, K. 1992. Cultural nationalism in contemporary Japan: A sociological enquiry. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Yoshino, K. 1997. Cultural nationalism and ‘internationalization’, in Van, Horne (ed.): 13146.Google Scholar