Abstract

Lecture 1. Humans and things - developing some ideas and terms Lecture 2. Çatalhöyük: a Neolithic ‘town’ in Turkey Lecture 3. Humans and things at Çatalhöyük Lecture 4. Developing a long-term view: the ‘origins of agriculture’ in the Middle East This lecture series has two aims. One is to discuss a new theoretical framework for the relationships between humans and material culture which I am calling ‘Thing Theory’. This framework focuses on the co-dependencies and entanglements between humans and non-humans and argues that long-term change comes about through the dispersed interactions of these entanglements. The theory is integrated in the sense that it adopts aspects of many theoretical agendas in recent archaeology, from experimental and behavioral archaeology to neo-evolutionary and selectionist models. It is also integrated in that it links theoretical agendas with archaeometry and archaeological science. The second aim is to show the application of Thing Theory to the 9000 year old Neolithic site of Çatalhöyük in central Turkey, and to the ‘origins of agriculture’ in the Middle East. My excavations at Çatalhöyük over the past 15 years have uncovered a rich world of human-thing entanglements and have shed light on the complex lived worlds within which agriculture and settled villages were produced.

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