Guest guest Posted April 11, 2004 Report Share Posted April 11, 2004 Dear Shourkat Shoro, No formal papers were presented at the Long Beach conference, so in this case there will be no published proceedings. There is no up-to-date comprehensive bibliography in Indus studies, so the best way to start a literature search is to begin with the most recent full reviews, and then to track down more specialized studies through the bibliographies in the papers cited in them. The bibliography in Kenoyer's Oxford U. Press book is a good general place to start since he is co-director of the Harappa project, where the broadest Indus excavations have occurred in recent decades. Many of the old excavation reports by Marshall, Mackay, Vats, Rao, etc., are still absolutely critical to any work in the field, for many reasons, and relatively inexpensive reprint volumes of these are generally in print in India. Any real work in the field requires a full set. The issue on Indus symbols at present is very much in flux, and will be changing even more when Vol. III of the _Corpus of Indus Seals and Inscriptions_ is published, which is supposed to happen very soon. There is much that is going on in this subfield that has only been presented so far in lectures, informal publications, or fairly inaccessible journals, and you can expect an explosion of publications with new viewpoints both right before and after Vol. III makes it to print. The volume will contain, among other things, hundreds of unpublished inscriptions (or those currently only published in difficult-to-get journals or excavation reports) that have come out of the Harappa project since 1989 (the last year covered in the current two volumes). The quality of the photographs of these new materials goes far beyond those found in the first two volumes, thanks to the superb photographic work by Richard Meadow, of the Harappa Project. (For some of these materials, since the indispensable project website at http://www.harappa.com .) Vol. III is also supposed to contain the best available old photos from the archives of the Archaeological Survey of the hundreds of important (and often very anomalous!) inscriptions that were lost in mysterious circumstances the 1920s and 30s. (Many apparently were stolen or, as archaeologists put it euphemistically, "found their way into private collections.") None of these hundreds of inscriptions are shown in the existing two volumes of the _Corpus of Indus Seals and Inscriptions_, which is one reason why any work on the inscriptions absolutely requires access to the old excavation reports. Whatever sources you consult, it is important that any work on the inscriptions focuses on _photographs_ and NOT from the transcriptions of inscriptions in the concordances or other studies , which (as I've shown in my own work) badly distort and "linearize" the inscriptions, stripping them of much of their historical value and making them look unreasonably like part of a phonetic writing system, which they certainly were not. One Indus field that is really exploding now, and is not covered well in most review books, pertains to studies of Indus agriculture, animal husbandry, fishing, etc. Steven Weber, one of the presenters at the Long Beach conference, has just co-edited a very important volume of studies on these topics: Steven Weber and William Belcher, _Indus ethnobiology: new perspectives from the field_ (Lanham, Md: Lexington Books: 2003). I cite below a list of the articles in the book, which is well worth buying (unfortunately, the publisher is small). You will find that the additional bibliographical materials that you'll find in these articles are very rich and important: The Indus civilization: an introduction to environment, subsistence and cultural history / Gregory L. Possehl -- Vegetation history and wood exploitation in Pakistani Baluchistan from the Neolithic to the Harappan period: the evidence from charcoal analysis / Margareta Tengberg and Stéphanie Thiébault -- Prehistoric pastoralism in northwestern South Asia from the Neolithic through the Harappan period / Richard H. Meadow and Ajita K. Patel -- Fish exploitation of the Indus Valley tradition / William R. Belcher -- Archaeobotany at Harappa: indications for change / Steven A. Weber -- Investigating agriculture and environment in South Asia: present and future contributions of opal phytoliths / Marco Madella -- Secondary products and urbanism in South Asia: the evidence for traction at Harappa / Laura J. Miller -- Food and fodder: plant usage and changing sociocultural landscapes during the Harappan phase in Gujarat, India / Seetha N. Reddy -- Indus and non-Indus agricultural traditions: local developments and crop adoptions on the Indian peninsula / Dorian Q. Fuller -- Minimizing risk?: approaches to pre-Harappan human ecology on the northwest margin of the Greater Indus system / Kenneth D. Thomas. Finally, I should mention that archaeological work in areas in Eastern Iran is exploding right now due to the recent discoveries around Jiroft, and everyone is waiting to see how this affects Indus studies, since the level of material wealth in this previously unknown civilization may have far exceeded that found in the Indus Valley. A recent group of articles on the Jiroft finds is found in Vol. 287 (Oct. 2003) of the French journal _Dossiers d'Archeologie_. The volume is only around 10 Euros with free shipping, and can be ordered online from the publisher at www.dossiers-archeologie.com . Preliminary reports on Jiroft finds are also found in the American journal _Science_ 302 (7 November 2003). Excavations in this region stopped essentially in the 1970s because of the political troubles in Iran, and are only now beginning. Even more important now would be expanded excavations in Afghanistan and Pakistan, but for obvious reasons that is not going to happen again for a long time, I'm afraid. Warm regards, Steve Farmer http://www.safarmer.com/downloads On Sunday, April 11, 2004, at 02:31 AM, shoukat hussain wrote: > On the e.mail I found the program of the Indus Valley > conference reported by shri Mahadev Deshponde . I am Director of the > Institute of Sindhology , University Of Sindh , Jamshoro, Pakistan. > (www.sindhology.com.pk ) Obviously I am interested in the research > work on the Greater Indus valley and Sarswati . I would like to know > the recent interpretations. I n Sindh , J.M.Kenoyer , Gregory Possehl > and Mahadevan are very well known and respected as their research work > is being studied and discussed . I would like to have published > proceedings of the conference on Indus Valley . These proceedings and > articles will benefit to our reseach scholars. Could some one please > help me. > Shoukat H. Shoro > > > > > > > > Tax Center - File online by April 15th > > > > > > > > Links > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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