Personal profile
Biography
Research interests
Zooarchaeology
My first fieldwork experience was in the summer of 1971 as a member of Andrews University's dig at Tall Hesban in Jordan. As a recent college graduate with a declared interest in a career in anthropology, I was assigned by Siegfried Horn, the director, to assist Robert M. Little, the project's physical anthropologist, to clean and label the animal bones. I ran with this opportunity, and with the help of some good reference materials I had brought along, I learned the basics of faunal analysis. My first publication (LaBianca 1973) was a report on the animal bones from the 1971 season at Hesban's report which greatly benefited from a week spent in the zooarchaeological laboratory of Johannes Lepiksaar of the Museum of Natural History in Gothenberg, Sweden. My zooarchaeological apprenticeships subsequently included work as a special student, supervised by Richard Meadow and Barbara Lawrence, at Harvard University's Department of Anthropology and Museum of Comparative Anatomy, respectively; and collaboration on the final report on the faunal remains from Hesban with Joachim Boessneck and Angela von den Driesch of the University of Munich (LaBianca and von den Driesch 1995).
Food Systems
It was as a doctoral student in sociocultural anthropology and archaeology at Brandeis University, supervised by Judith Zeitlin and Robert Hunt, that I received the mentorship that enabled me to adapt the food systems concept as a framework for analyzing long-term changes in the zooarchaeological record of Hesban. This concept, along with the related notions of cycles of intensification and abatement and episodes of sedentarization and nomadization, enabled me to posit systematic temporal interrelationships between various lines of archaeological evidence from Hesban and vicinity, including changes in regional settlement patterns, architectural remains, pottery, objects, carbonized seeds and animal bones. This work culminated with my doctoral dissertation, which was revised and published as the first volume in a National Endowment for the Humanities sponsored Hesban final reports series (LaBianca 1990). I have also published a number of articles describing various ways in which I have used the food systems framework as a means to interpret archaeological remains (cf. LaBianca 1991).
Ethnoarchaeology, Ethnohistory, & Indigenous Knowledge
Having succeeded, in the course of my doctoral research, in documenting the existence of multi- millennial cycles of intensification and abatement in the food systems of Hesban and Central Transjordan, much of my research since then has centered on discovering the mechanisms that account for these cycles. There are two distinct phases to this research, the first begun during the late eighties and early nineties, the second since then. The first phase focused on discovering the internal cultural mechanisms that enabled individual households and whole communities to shift back and forth between sedentary and nomadic ways. This research, which was sponsored by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities, involved extensive use of ethnoarchaeological and ethnohistorical data, culminated with identification of seven such mechanisms -- local level water management, mixed agro-pastoralism, fluid homeland territories, residential flexibility, hospitality, honor and tribalism. I have discussed these local- level survival strategies in several recent articles, referring to them as "indigenous hardiness structures" (LaBianca 2000).
Environmental Archaeology
The second phase has centered on discovering the nature of external influences that have played a role in producing these cycles. To this end I have pursued two major lines of research, the first dealing with the role of climate change, the second with the role of ancient world systems and civilizations. Our initial studies of ancient pollen, plant and animal remains from Hesban and vicinity did not produce compelling evidence of macroclimatic change during the past five millennia as a factor in explaining local food system cycles (LaBianca and Lacelle 1986). Subsequent research sponsored by the National Geographic Society has, however, suggested a possible link between episodes of food system intensification and abatement and cycles of environmental degeneration and regeneration (LaBianca and Christopherson 1998).
Civilizations & Global History
Efforts to correlate ups and downs in Hesban's fortunes to ancient world system cycles are still underway (LaBianca and Scham 2005). What this endeavor has brought to light already is the important role that competing civilizations and imperial projects have played in shaping Transjordan's and Hesban's economic and cultural history over the past four thousand years. This realization, that global history or the history of inter-civilizational encounters and imperial clashes is crucial to understanding the archaeological record of the Levantine countries and Hesban in particular, has led me to actively pursue research partnerships with historians, epigraphers, geographers, sociologists and anthropologists who share this interest in global/local interactions.
Global Moments in the Levant
One such partnership is the Global Moments Levant Project that was recently funded by the Norwegian Research Council. The four-year 2.6 million USD project will enable an international team of sixteen scholars representing the above disciplines to collaborate on identifying breakthrough events that change people's lives and their futures (see attached announcement). I have also approached the American Schools of Oriental Research with a concept proposal that would facilitate coordinated research on imperial projects in the Levant bv ASOR scholars.
Great & Little Traditions
My own line of research in connection with the Global Moments project is re-visiting the pioneering work of University of Chicago anthropologist Robert Redfield on the topic of civilization. I have recently submitted for publication two articles that harness Redfield's great and little traditions framework to understanding intercivilizational encounters and clashes in the Levant (LaBianca forthcoming). Great traditions that are of particular importance to understanding long-term culture changes and global moments in the Levant (and in particular, at Hesban) include the Egyptian, Mesopotamian, Canaanite, Hebrew, Greek/Hellenistic, Roman, Byzantine, Umayyad, Abbasid, Latin Christian, Mamluk, Ottoman, and Modern Capitalist.
Future Research & Publishing
My goal in terms of future research is to continue fieldwork at Hesban in Jordan focusing on the above-mentioned research agenda and to publish a series of articles from the perspective of anthropological archaeology that identify and analyze the imperial projects by means of which each of the above-mentioned great traditions were spread and impacted the Levantine countries. I also plan to continue to champion the publication of the remaining six volumes of the 14-volume Hesban Final Publication Series.
Contact Information
Phone: (269) 471-3515
Related documents
Education/Academic qualification
BA Behavioral Sciences and Religion, Andrews University
PhD Anthropology, Brandeis University
MA Anthropology, Loma Linda University
Research Interests
- Zooarchaeology
- Food Systems Research
- Ethnoarchaeology
- Ethnohistory
- Indigenous knowledge
- Environmental Archaeology
- Civilization Research and Global History
- Global Moments in the Levant
- Great and Little Traditions
Disciplines
- Anthropology
- Archaeological Anthropology
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Ancient Food Systems Research: Lessons Learned from Tall Hisban and the Madaba Plains Project, Jordan
LaBianca, O., Jul 28 2024.Research output: Contribution to conference › Presentation › peer-review
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Canonical Discourses as a Form of Sub-Imperial Power and Means to Local Social Order in the Southern Levant
LaBianca, O., Nov 20 2024.Research output: Contribution to conference › Presentation › peer-review
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Grand Narrative, Archaeology and Positionality: Is Diachronic Microhistory a Way Forward?
LaBianca, O., Jun 3 2024.Research output: Contribution to conference › Presentation › peer-review
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Saving the Planet: Science, Culture, and Theology in the Anthropocene
LaBianca, O., Nov 7 2024.Research output: Contribution to conference › Presentation › peer-review
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Site Custody Activism: Sine qua non dell’ ‘Archeologia di comunità.’
LaBianca, O., 2024, Florentia: Studi di archeologia. Florence, Italy: Firenze University Press, Vol. 5. p. 327-344Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Chapter
Open Access
Activities
- 6 Invited talk
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The Legacy of Heshbon: Biblical Memory, Archaeology, and Contemporary Narratives
LaBianca, O. (Speaker)
Feb 18 2025Activity: Talk or presentation › Invited talk
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Microhistory and Archaeology or Archaeology as Microhistory: A Pathway to Global History
LaBianca, O. (Speaker)
Oct 15 2024Activity: Talk or presentation › Invited talk
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From Take-and-Leave Archaeology to Community Archaeology: The Dig that Changed How Archaeology is Done
LaBianca, O. (Speaker) & Geraty, L. T. (Speaker)
Aug 10 2024Activity: Talk or presentation › Invited talk
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Heshbon: The Old Testament City that Changed Adventism and Archaeology
LaBianca, O. (Speaker) & Geraty, L. T. (Speaker)
Aug 3 2024Activity: Talk or presentation › Invited talk
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Glimpses of a Southern Levantine Cultural Paradigm: The View from Tall Hisban, Jordan
LaBianca, O. (Speaker)
Oct 23 2024 → Oct 25 2024Activity: Talk or presentation › Invited talk