Biblical Archaeology Review

Biblical Archaeology Review is the flagship publication of the Biblical Archaeology Society. For more than 40 years it has been making the world of archaeology in the lands of the Bible come alive for the interested layperson. Full of vivid images and articles written by leading scholars, this is a must read for anyone interested in the archaeology of the ancient Near East.

Endnote 43 - How Mute Stones Speak: Interpreting What We Dig Up

See, for example, Bunimovitz, The Land of Israel in the Late Bronze Age; “Socio-Political Transformations”; A. Bernard Knapp, “Independence and Imperialism: Politico-economic Structures in the Bronze Age Levant,” in Knapp, Archaeology, Annales, and Ethnohistory, pp. 83–98; Society and Polity at Bronze Age Pella, especially pp. 13–14, for the reemphasis of the younger generation of Annalists on mentalités—ideology and symbolism within the cultural context.

Endnote 42 - How Mute Stones Speak: Interpreting What We Dig Up

William G. Dever, “Biblical Archaeology: Death and Rebirth,” in Biblical Archaeology Today, 1990. Proceedings of the Second International Congress on Biblical Archaeology (Jerusalem: Israel Exploration Society, 1993), pp. 706–722, and the bibliography cited there in note 8; Recent Archaeological Discoveries, Chapter 1; and “Archaeology, Syro-Palestinian and Biblical.”

Endnote 41 - How Mute Stones Speak: Interpreting What We Dig Up

See, respectively, the papers by Israel Finkelstein (“The Emergence of Israel: A Phase in the Cyclical History of Canaan in the Third and Second Millennia BCE”) and Shlomo Bunimovitz (“Socio-Political Transformations in the Central Hill Country in the Late Bronze-Iron I Transition”), both in Finkelstein and Na’aman, eds., From Nomadism to Monarchy, pp. 150–178; 179–202.

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