Vol. 3 No. 2 (2024): Warfare and Peacemaking Among Matricultures
Research Articles

The New Ideology of ‘Eternal War’ in Archaeology: Critical Reflections on Early History

A heap of skeletons in a mass grave in China

Published 2024-05-09

Keywords

  • organized war,
  • feud,
  • peaceful societies,
  • ideology,
  • archaeology

How to Cite

The New Ideology of ‘Eternal War’ in Archaeology: Critical Reflections on Early History. (2024). Matrix: A Journal for Matricultural Studies, 3(2), 105-112. https://doi.org/10.60676/n075rj53

Abstract

Nowadays the vocabulary of war dominates everyday language, just as violence and war dominate the media. This way of thinking, in which war predominates, sees peace as nothing more than the absence of war, and sees it as the result of rules of conflict – just as if peace and peace building did not follow their own rules. Even among scholars, the current fashion is to look everywhere for violence and war. This applies to both Indigenous societies and early epochs of human history, which until recently were considered peaceful. Instead of an appropriately meticulous analysis of ethnographic records and archaeological findings, articles of belief are formulated. The result is an extreme devaluation of peace.

The idea of ‘peaceable’ societies is just as imprecise as the notion of ‘warlike’ societies, and it is just as ideologically charged. One can directly experience how this involves emotions rather than knowledge by noticing how some contemporaries become downright aggressive whenever anyone speaks of earlier peaceable societies. The spiteful tone intensifies especially when one speaks of peaceable societies in connection with matriarchy. It is worth taking a closer look at this problem and to find clear definitions, which will be done in my paper.

References

  1. Gregor, Thomas: ‘Uneasy Peace: Intertribal Relations in Brazil’s Upper Xingu,’ in The Anthropology of War, ed. Jonathan Haas, New York: Cambridge University Press, 1990.
  2. Goettner-Abendroth, Heide: Matriarchal Societies. Studies on Indigenous Cultures across the Globe, New York 2013, Peter Lang Publishing.
  3. Keeley, Lawrence H.: War before Civilization. The Myth of the Peaceful Savage, Oxford-New York 1996, Oxford University Press.
  4. Peter-Röcher, Heidi: Gewalt und Krieg im prähistorischen Europa. Beiträge zur Konfliktforschung auf der Grundlage archäologischer, anthropologischer und ethnologischer Quellen, Series: Universitätsforschungen zur Prähistorischen Archäologie, vol. 143, Bonn 2007, Verlag Dr. Rudolf Habelt.
  5. Peter-Röcher, Heide: personal interview on August 14, 2014, at the University of Würzburg.