“…This paradigm uses the Three-Age system, progressive/complexity narratives, and core-periphery framework to construct a normative view of Southeast Asia's past. This normative paradigm, based on essentialist or nominalist thinking (Marwick 2008), seeks closeness of fit with modal types instead of testing multiple working hypotheses that could explain the patterning, and produces what Binford (1981) called post-hoc accommodative arguments rather than new knowledge about the region's archaeological record. The paradigm is constraining, Eurocentric (Shoocongdej 2011:17), and normative in Southeast Asian archaeology, at least.…”