Saxe–Goldstein Hypothesis
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archaeology Archaeology or archeology is the study of human activity through the recovery and analysis of material culture. The archaeological record consists of Artifact (archaeology), artifacts, architecture, biofact (archaeology), biofacts or ecofacts, ...
, the Saxe–Goldstein hypothesis is a middle-range theory about the relationship between a society's burial practices and its social organization. It predicts a correlation between two phenomena: the use of specific areas to dispose of the dead, and the legitimation of control over restricted resources through claims of lineal ties to dead ancestors. The
hypothesis A hypothesis (: hypotheses) is a proposed explanation for a phenomenon. A scientific hypothesis must be based on observations and make a testable and reproducible prediction about reality, in a process beginning with an educated guess o ...
was first formulated by the American anthropologist Arthur Saxe in 1970, as the last in a series of eight, and was developed by Lynne Goldstein later in the 1970s. In reference to its origin, it is sometimes known as Hypothesis 8. Drawing on the
ethnographic Ethnography is a branch of anthropology and the systematic study of individual cultures. It explores cultural phenomena from the point of view of the subject of the study. Ethnography is also a type of social research that involves examining ...
work of
Mervyn Meggitt Mervyn John Meggitt (20 August 1924 – 13 November 2004 New York State) was an Australian anthropologist and one of the pioneering researchers of highland Papua New Guinea and of Indigenous Australian cultures. Early life Born in Warwick, Q ...
and the role theory developed by
Ward Goodenough Ward Hunt Goodenough II (May 30, 1919 – June 9, 2013) was an American anthropologist, who has made contributions to kinship studies, linguistic anthropology, cross-cultural studies, and cognitive anthropology. Biography and major works G ...
, Saxe predicted that societies in which
corporate groups A corporate group, company group or business group, also formally known as a group of companies, is a collection of parent and subsidiary corporations that function as a single economic entity through a common source of control. These types of gr ...
legitimized their claims to crucial, restricted resources through narratives of ties to ancestors would be more likely to use formal areas for the disposal of the dead, and that societies using such areas would be more likely to contain such corporate groups. His work coincided with that of
Lewis Binford Lewis Roberts Binford (November 21, 1931 – April 11, 2011) was an American archaeologist known for his influential work in archaeological theory, ethnoarchaeology and the Paleolithic period. He is widely considered among the most influe ...
, who argued for the use of funerary practices as evidence for social organization and for the status of the deceased in life, such that the use of mortuary evidence for these purposes came to be known as the Saxe–Binford program. Saxe's hypothesis was refined by Goldstein, who stipulated that formal disposal areas were only one possible means of claiming ties to ancestors and control over restricted resources, and therefore that the lack of such areas need not imply the lack of corporate groups competing over such resources. As a result, it became known as the Saxe–Goldstein hypothesis. The Saxe–Goldstein hypothesis was credited with revitalizing interest in funerary archaeology. It was widely applied, particularly by adherents of
processual archaeology Processual archaeology (formerly, the New Archaeology) is a form of archaeological theory. It had its beginnings in 1958 with the work of Gordon Willey and Philip Phillips, ''Method and Theory in American Archaeology,'' in which the pair stated ...
, a body of theory which sought to bring archaeology closer to the
natural sciences Natural science or empirical science is one of the branches of science concerned with the description, understanding and prediction of natural phenomena, based on empirical evidence from observation and experimentation. Mechanisms such as peer ...
. In the 1980s and 1990s, it was applied to (among others) the distribution of
megalithic A megalith is a large Rock (geology), stone that has been used to construct a prehistoric structure or monument, either alone or together with other stones. More than 35,000 megalithic structures have been identified across Europe, ranging ...
tombs in the European
Stone Age The Stone Age was a broad prehistory, prehistoric period during which Rock (geology), stone was widely used to make stone tools with an edge, a point, or a percussion surface. The period lasted for roughly 3.4 million years and ended b ...
, to prehistoric Aboriginal burial grounds near Australia's
Murray River The Murray River (in South Australia: River Murray; Ngarrindjeri language, Ngarrindjeri: ''Millewa'', Yorta Yorta language, Yorta Yorta: ''Dhungala'' or ''Tongala'') is a river in Southeastern Australia. It is List of rivers of Australia, Aust ...
, and to the different levels of state control over cemeteries in classical Athens and ancient Rome. It was criticized from within the processual movement for failing to account for important but archaeologically invisible means of funerary differentiation, and by post-processual archaeologists, such as
Ian Hodder Ian Richard Hodder (born 23 November 1948, in Bristol) is a British archaeologist and pioneer of postprocessualist theory in archaeology that first took root among his students and in his own work between 1980 and 1990. At this time he had suc ...
, who viewed it as ignoring the beliefs, motivations and competing interests of those responsible for disposing of the dead. By the twenty-first century, explicit use of the hypothesis was considered a minority pursuit, particularly in British archaeology, though it was also described as part of the "theoretical unconscious" of
Neolithic The Neolithic or New Stone Age (from Ancient Greek, Greek 'new' and 'stone') is an archaeological period, the final division of the Stone Age in Mesopotamia, Asia, Europe and Africa (c. 10,000 BCE to c. 2,000 BCE). It saw the Neolithic Revo ...
archaeologists by James Whitley and as part of "the realm of archaeological common sense" by Robert Rosenswig, Margaret Briggs, and Marilyn Masson in 2020.


Saxe's formulation

The Saxe–Goldstein hypothesis is a middle-range theory, in that it attempts to explain the processes behind the formation of the
archaeological record The archaeological record is the body of physical (not written) evidence about the past. It is one of the core concepts in archaeology, the academic discipline concerned with documenting and interpreting the archaeological record. Archaeological t ...
. It is within the tradition of
processual archaeology Processual archaeology (formerly, the New Archaeology) is a form of archaeological theory. It had its beginnings in 1958 with the work of Gordon Willey and Philip Phillips, ''Method and Theory in American Archaeology,'' in which the pair stated ...
, a positivist school of thought developed in the 1960s which aimed to model archaeology upon the
scientific method The scientific method is an Empirical evidence, empirical method for acquiring knowledge that has been referred to while doing science since at least the 17th century. Historically, it was developed through the centuries from the ancient and ...
of the natural sciences. Processual archaeology emphasized the development and testing of hypotheses about general laws of human behavior. The anthropologist Arthur Saxe, then a graduate student at the
University of Michigan The University of Michigan (U-M, U of M, or Michigan) is a public university, public research university in Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States. Founded in 1817, it is the oldest institution of higher education in the state. The University of Mi ...
, articulated the first version of the hypothesis in his 1970 doctoral dissertation. In his thesis, Saxe proposed eight hypotheses concerning the relationship between mortuary practices and the social structure of the society that uses them. His eighth hypothesis predicted that: Saxe developed this hypothesis from the work of
Mervyn Meggitt Mervyn John Meggitt (20 August 1924 – 13 November 2004 New York State) was an Australian anthropologist and one of the pioneering researchers of highland Papua New Guinea and of Indigenous Australian cultures. Early life Born in Warwick, Q ...
, who found (based on anthropological observations between 1933 and the early 1960s) that the Mae Enga people of
Papua New Guinea Papua New Guinea, officially the Independent State of Papua New Guinea, is an island country in Oceania that comprises the eastern half of the island of New Guinea and offshore islands in Melanesia, a region of the southwestern Pacific Ocean n ...
determined the legitimate ownership of land through claims of lineal descent from ancestors who had once settled it. It was based in the role theory developed by
Ward Goodenough Ward Hunt Goodenough II (May 30, 1919 – June 9, 2013) was an American anthropologist, who has made contributions to kinship studies, linguistic anthropology, cross-cultural studies, and cognitive anthropology. Biography and major works G ...
in the 1960s, which interpreted acts in everyday life as acting out socially defined roles and categories. Matthew Suriano has also suggested that it was inspired by the work of Fustel de Coulanges, a nineteenth-century historian who connected mortuary practices with the growth of
property rights The right to property, or the right to own property (cf. ownership), is often classified as a human right for natural persons regarding their Possession (law), possessions. A general recognition of a right to private property is found more rarely ...
in ancient cities. Saxe considered the hypothesis supported by the cases he studied – the Kapauku, Asante, and
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peoples, respectively of
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, Ghana, and
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 – but to require further testing upon a larger sample.


Parallel work by Lewis Binford

In the 1970s and 1980s, the American archaeologist
Lewis Binford Lewis Roberts Binford (November 21, 1931 – April 11, 2011) was an American archaeologist known for his influential work in archaeological theory, ethnoarchaeology and the Paleolithic period. He is widely considered among the most influe ...
was a leading figure in the theoretical movement known as the "New Archaeology" (later called processual archaeology). In a 1962 article, Binford had called upon archaeologists to make greater use of ethnographic parallels, as Saxe later did, to draw conclusions about past societies, adapting an earlier comment by
Gordon Willey Gordon Randolph Willey (7 March 1913 – 28 April 2002) was an American archaeologist who was described by colleagues as the "dean" of New World archaeology.Sabloff 2004, p.406 Willey performed fieldwork at excavations in South America, Central A ...
and Philip Phillips to write that "archaeology is anthropology or it is nothing". In a 1971 article titled "Mortuary Practices: Their Study and Their Potential", Binford argued that funerary practices should be understood as reflections of the social organization of the people who carry them out, rather than as consequences of the ancestry of different cultural groups or of contacts between them (the cultural diffusionist or culture-historical model then prevalent in archaeology). He set out to test the degree to which the social status of an individual and the social complexity of their society were reflected in mortuary practice, and concluded that simpler societies would show fewer dimensions of differentiation between individuals in death, and conversely. The belief that an individual's treatment in death can be used to infer information about both their status in life and the organization of their society has been termed the "Saxe–Binford program" or "Saxe–Binford hypothesis". Robert Chapman has characterized the work of both Saxe and Binford in this area as "exploratory rather than ... fully theorized rtheoretical". Binford investigated a sample of 40 societies and concluded that more complex societies indeed showed more and more abstract degrees of differentiation in funerary ritual, and that mortuary differentiation according to age correlated negatively with the level of hereditary inequality in a society. Joanne Curtin, in 2017, described the work of Saxe and Binford as the most significant recent development in funerary archaeology.


Development by Lynne Goldstein

Saxe's Hypothesis 8 was widely adopted and developed by processual archaeologists during the 1970s. Lynne Goldstein, then a doctoral student at
Northwestern University Northwestern University (NU) is a Private university, private research university in Evanston, Illinois, United States. Established in 1851 to serve the historic Northwest Territory, it is the oldest University charter, chartered university in ...
, wrote her own thesis on it, re-analyzing Saxe's data and producing a study of 30 societies in relation to the hypothesis. In a 1981 chapter, Goldstein argued that Saxe had been correct that formal disposal areas for the dead generally indicated a society in which social structures were organized around lineal descent, but disagreed that such social structures would necessarily be expressed through the maintenance of such areas. She reframed the hypothesis as three related sub-hypotheses: Based on her doctoral research, Goldstein concluded that: Goldstein's reformulation made Hypothesis 8 a one-way argument: while formal burial areas could be taken as evidence that
corporate groups A corporate group, company group or business group, also formally known as a group of companies, is a collection of parent and subsidiary corporations that function as a single economic entity through a common source of control. These types of gr ...
existed with control of restricted resources, it did not necessarily follow that all societies that included such groups would institute formal burial areas – different cultures may create different symbolic and ritual expressions of these social structures. Goldstein's formulation of the hypothesis largely displaced that of Saxe, with the result that it became generally known as the Saxe–Goldstein hypothesis.


Application

In collaboration with L. P. Gall, Saxe studied
swidden Slash-and-burn agriculture is a form of shifting cultivation that involves the cutting and burning of plants in a forest or woodland to create a field called a swidden. The method begins by cutting down the trees and woody plants in an area. Th ...
farmers in Malaysia who had been forced to move into permanent villages. In a 1977 publication of this study, Saxe and Gall noted that these farmers subsequently shifted towards burying their dead in formal cemeteries, which they took as evidence for Hypothesis 8. In 1982,
Maurice Bloch Maurice Émile Félix Bloch (born 21 October 1939) is a British anthropologist. He is famous for his fieldwork on the shift of agriculturalists in Madagascar, Japan and other parts of the world, and has also contributed important neo-Marxian w ...
made a study of the
Merina people The Merina people (also known as the Imerina, Antimerina, Borizany or Ambaniandro) formerly called Amboalambo are the largest ethnic group in Madagascar.
of Madagascar, for whom he concluded that "the notion of ancestral land, that is land belonging to the
deme In Ancient Greece, a deme or (, plural: ''demoi'', δήμοι) was a suburb or a subdivision of Classical Athens, Athens and other city-states. Demes as simple subdivisions of land in the countryside existed in the 6th century BC and earlier, bu ...
ommunity is totally merged with the notion of ancestors. The ancestors had lived and were buried in the ancestral land; the land, in the form of terraces, had been made by the ancestors". The anthropologist James A. Brown considers this reinforcing evidence for the Saxe–Goldstein hypothesis. In 1984, Jack Glazier made a study of the Mbeere people of Kenya, who traditionally disposed of corpses with little ritual until a 1930 government decree mandated the burial of the dead, and concluded that this alteration in mortuary practice allowed the newly created graves to be used to legitimize claims to hereditary control of the land around them. This has likewise been cited as evidence in support of the Saxe–Goldstein hypothesis. In 1981, Brown described the methods of Saxe and Binford as a means of applying the social theories of
Morton Fried Morton Herbert Fried (March 21, 1923 in Bronx, New York – December 18, 1986 in Leonia, New Jersey),Elman Service Elman Rogers Service (May 18, 1915 – November 14, 1996) was an American cultural anthropologist. Biography He was born on May 18, 1915, in Tecumseh, Michigan and died on November 14, 1996, in Santa Barbara, California. He earned a bachelor' ...
, who studied the development and evolution of socio-political organization, to material culture. Robert Chapman, in the same year, argued for the utility of the Saxe–Goldstein hypothesis to explain the distribution of
megalithic A megalith is a large Rock (geology), stone that has been used to construct a prehistoric structure or monument, either alone or together with other stones. More than 35,000 megalithic structures have been identified across Europe, ranging ...
tombs in prehistoric Europe. In 1988, Colin Pardoe applied the hypothesis to prehistoric Aboriginal burial grounds in southeastern Australia, considering it a useful tool to interpret these as means of legitimizing control over territory near the
Murray River The Murray River (in South Australia: River Murray; Ngarrindjeri language, Ngarrindjeri: ''Millewa'', Yorta Yorta language, Yorta Yorta: ''Dhungala'' or ''Tongala'') is a river in Southeastern Australia. It is List of rivers of Australia, Aust ...
. Umesh Chattopadhyaya did the same in 1996, concluding that it could be applied to
Mesolithic The Mesolithic (Ancient Greek language, Greek: μέσος, ''mesos'' 'middle' + λίθος, ''lithos'' 'stone') or Middle Stone Age is the Old World archaeological period between the Upper Paleolithic and the Neolithic. The term Epipaleolithic i ...
hunter-gatherer societies of the
Ganges The Ganges ( ; in India: Ganga, ; in Bangladesh: Padma, ). "The Ganges Basin, known in India as the Ganga and in Bangladesh as the Padma, is an international which goes through India, Bangladesh, Nepal and China." is a trans-boundary rive ...
valley. Patricia McAnany popularised the hypothesis among Mesoamerican archaeologists through her 1995 book ''Living with the Ancestors'', in which she argued for the use of burial as creating a "principle of first occupancy", giving claims to land through descent from those who originally farmed it. Carla Antonnacio, also in 1995, used the hypothesis as a foundation of her study of the use of cemeteries between the Bronze Age and Early Iron Age in Greece, arguing that the evidence of feasting and libations at ancient tombs, as well as their re-entry and re-use, was evidence for the
ancestor worship The veneration of the dead, including one's ancestors, is based on love and respect for the deceased. In some cultures, it is related to beliefs that the dead have a continued existence, and may possess the ability to influence the fortune of t ...
of mythical heroes. Matthew C. Velasco's 2014 study of prehispanic burials in Peru's Colca Valley used the Saxe–Goldstein hypothesis alongside traditionally post-processual focuses on the agency of material objects and the role of funerary rituals in constructing social identities. In 1983, Douglas Charles and Jane E. Buikstra made a study of Mississippian funerary sites from the Archaic period (). They connected the hypotheses of Saxe and Goldstein to modes of subsistence, arguing that sedentary modes of subsistence correlated with the use of formal cemetery areas, and that the inclusion of individuals in cemeteries implied their inclusion in corporate groups competing for restricted resources. Ian Morris invoked the hypothesis in 1991 to explain the differences in burial practice between the classical cities of Athens and Rome, by which cemeteries were tightly controlled by the state in Athens but comparatively unregulated in Rome. He added a cognitive explanation, based on the use of textual evidence, to suggest that Athenian cemeteries were used to legitimise claims to citizenship, which was comparatively more restricted and more valuable in Athens than in Rome. Morris qualified the hypothesis by emphasizing that claims of descent from ancestors need not be associated with ancestor worship. Luca Cherstich employed the hypothesis in his 2024 study of the tombs of classical Cyrene, but wrote that it was necessary to temper it with a post-processual investigation of the intent and agency behind the formation of the funerary record.


Reception


Criticism

The Saxe–Goldstein hypothesis was criticized by post-processual archaeologists of the 1980s, who argued that it did not leave sufficient room for the beliefs and intentions of those who lived in the past and created the archaeological record.
Ian Hodder Ian Richard Hodder (born 23 November 1948, in Bristol) is a British archaeologist and pioneer of postprocessualist theory in archaeology that first took root among his students and in his own work between 1980 and 1990. At this time he had suc ...
, in 1982, used the example of the Mesakin people of Sudan to argue that the burial record may only represent an idealized fraction of the social relations within a society, drawing attention to what he called "the disjunction between burial pattern and social pattern". In the same year, Hodder's students
Michael Shanks Michael Garrett Shanks (born December 15, 1970) is a Canadian actor. He is best known for his role as Daniel Jackson in the long-running military science fiction television series ''Stargate SG-1'' and as Dr Charles Harris in the Canadian medi ...
and Christopher Tilley criticized the functionalist position adopted by Saxe and other processualists, writing that such arguments were inadequate to explain the specific content and context of funerary ritual, and that mortuary practices may be used to invert and misrepresent the social order as much as they may reflect it. Attempts to use mortuary evidence to infer social status or organization fell from scholarly favor in the 1980s, and were generally replaced by investigations of what funerary practices meant to those who carried them out. In 1984, Hodder again criticized the Saxe–Goldstein hypothesis as presenting a "relatively passive view of society", in which cultural context was ignored and the meanings of funerary actions, which Hodder considered critical to understanding the effects of those actions, were lost. Other criticisms levelled by Morris, among others, included that burial itself represents only part of the funerary ritual, and that excessive reliance upon it in archaeological explanation may neglect the role of other aspects which are less archaeologically visible. In a 1986 dissertation, R. A. Kerber argued that the framework proposed by Saxe and Binford only held where the transfer of power between generations was unquestioned, rather than being a site of negotiation, contention or competition. Over the course of the 1980s, the hypothesis came to be generally rejected; James Whitley suggests that this was due to a mistaken belief among archaeologists that it must be used as a rigid law rather than a general relationship. It was criticized, including from within the processual movement, on both ethnographic and archaeological grounds. John M. O'Shea argued that important indicators of mortuary differentiation would not necessarily be preserved in the archaeological record. In 1991, Whitley questioned the validity of the ethnographic evidence behind the hypothesis, writing that the burial practices of the Merina (used as evidence by Saxe) owed more to ideology and beliefs about the dead than to the social position of the deceased, and that it was "seriously misleading" to use them as straightforward confirmation of Saxe's hypothesis. In 2002, William Rathje, Vincent Lamotta, and William Longacre used the Saxe–Goldstein hypothesis as an example of what they called the "black hole" of archaeological explanation, suggesting that its poor fit with burial practices in the contemporary United States illustrated the unwilligness of archaeologists to incorporate observations from their own societies into supposedly general models of human behaviour. Whitley considered the Saxe–Goldstein hypothesis a generalisation, rather than a universal truth, and that it could not be considered proven; he further suggested that it underemphasized the competing agencies and interests of the individuals involved in the burial process. He also criticized the hypothesis (as used by Morris) for relying excessively on ancestors as an explanation, arguing that ethnographic parallels did not give ancestors the same central social role as Saxe, Goldstein, and their followers assumed they must hold. In 2012, André Strauss wrote that the hypothesis was of limited interpretative value for Brazilian sites of the Archaic period, particularly due to the difficulty of precisely defining a "formal disposal area" within the terms of the prediction.


Legacy

Some post-processual archaeologists returned to using funerary evidence to infer social hierarchies in the 1990s. However, during this period, funerary archaeology played a comparatively small role in (in particular) American archaeology, due both to cultural changes and to methodological difficulties with its study. Parker Pearson, in 1999, wrote that the hypothesis had value as a partial explanation of why cemeteries may be constructed, but did not explain why cemeteries, rather than other means of legitimation through lineal descent, would be adopted in a society, and that it did not encompass the full significance of relationships between the living and the ancestors. It remained a minority position, particularly among British archaeologists; in 2010, Emma Elder wrote that it was "in the graveyard of disused theoretical tools", though she considered that it could still be useful with proper qualification. In 2013, David Edwards wrote that the Saxe–Goldstein hypothesis could be applied to certain African burial rites, such as the below-house burial practiced in West Africa, though these rituals also contained other meanings and alternative methods could be used alongside them to assert territorial claims. Hypothesis 8 was described by Robert Chapman in 2013 as the most famous of Saxe's eight hypotheses, and by Parker Pearson as the only one which had continued to be used and discussed by 1999. In 2002, Whitley wrote that it had become part of the "theoretical unconscious" of Neolithic archaeologists, including those who subscribed to post-processual theories that generally rejected the basis of the Saxe–Goldstein hypothesis. Brown wrote in 2007 that it was the "most enduring accomplishment" of the processual approach to mortuary studies, and that it had remained useful into the present. While he judged that the use of the hypothesis had seen "limited success in producing durable findings", he credited it with renewing scholarly interest in funerary practices among archaeologists, other scholars, and the public. Robert Rosenswig, Margaret Briggs, and Marilyn Masson similarly considered it part of "the realm of archaeological common sense" in 2020.


Footnotes


Explanatory notes


References


Bibliography

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * {{refend Archaeological theory Archaeology of death