ABSTRACT

Travellers in Time re-evaluates the extent to which the earliest Mediterranean civilizations were affected by population movement. It critiques both traditional culture-history-grounded notions of movement in the region as straightforwardly transformative, and the processual, systemic models that have more recently replaced this view, arguing that newer scholarship too often pays limited attention to the specific encounters, experiences and agents involved in travel.

By assessing a broad range of recent archaeological and ancient textual data from the Aegean and central and east Mediterranean via five comprehensive studies, this book makes a compelling case for rethinking issues such as identity, agency, materiality and experience through an understanding of movement as transformative.

This innovative and timely study will be of interest to advanced undergraduates, postgraduate students and scholars in the fields of Aegean/Mediterranean prehistory and Classical archaeology, as well as anyone interested in ancient Aegean and Mediterranean culture.

chapter 1|32 pages

Imagining movement

chapter 2|34 pages

Movement as explanation

The heritage

chapter 5|64 pages

‘Aegean’ expansion

New dynamics, new boundaries in the later LBA

chapter 6|84 pages

Myth and movement from c. 1200 bc

chapter 8|15 pages

Conclusions

Movement disassembled