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- Title
The Invention of tradition: Vinča script.
- Authors
Palavestra, Aleksandar
- Abstract
The problematic term the Vinca script denotes a number of incised ornaments and signs on the surface of the pottery of the Vinca culture - one of the most important "cultures" of the South Eastern European Neolithic. The modes of use and abuse of this phenomenon of and the very term the Vinca script have changed through time, elloquently testifying about the paradigm shifts in the European archaeology, at the same time indicating dangerous contaminations of archaeology by pseudo-archaeological ideas. During the 19th and first half of the 20th century, the idea of a script in the Neolithic cultures of South Eastern Europe surfaced occasionally as an argument for the short "historical" chronology and Near Eastern influences. During the 1980s the idea of the Vinca script emerges again in Serbia, this time, as an invented tradition, from the pseudo-scholar circles, and is massively supported by the media. The Vinca script becomes the central motif of a much larger pseudoscholar movement: the invention of script is linked to praehistory of South Eastern Europe, allegedly from Palaeolithic, Mesolithic, Lepenski Vir, over the Etruscan, Lydian and other scripts, down to Cyrillic and Latin letters. Unfortunately, over the last years the term the Vinca script - falsely represented by the media as a new and equally valid interpretive paradigm - seeps into the general public discourse, and even into archaeology itself.
- Subjects
SERBIA; POTTERY; VINCA culture; VINCA; ANTIQUITIES collecting; ARCHAEOLOGY
- Publication
Issues in Ethnology Anthropology, 2010, Vol 5, Issue 2, p239
- ISSN
0353-1589
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.21301/eap.v5i2.11