Gender locales and local genders in archaeology
In: BAR international series 1425
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In: BAR international series 1425
Der Artikel untersucht die Bedeutung von sozialen Netzwerken in der Geschichte der Archäologie. Im Rückgriff auf biographische und prosopographische Ansätze soll eine geeignete Methode zur Untersuchung der Entwicklung des Fachs herausgearbeitet werden und eine Alternative zu den traditionellen Erzählungen in der Archäologiegeschichte. Anhand einer Fallstudie über die miteinander verbundenen politischen und archäologischen Netzwerke in den frühen britischen Mandaten Palästina und Transjordanien werden allgemeine Kategorien für die Interpretation und Visualisierung von sozialen Netzwerken diskutiert. Die Analyse sozialer Netzwerke gibt Einblick in den historischen Kontext archäologischer Arbeit und erlaubt es, die Rollen von Männern und Frauen, Politikern, Soldaten, Künstlern, Architekten und Sponsoren bei der Ausgrabung, Interpretation, Präsentation und Rezeption von Archäologie zu untersuchen.
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"Using case studies from around the globe and multiple time periods, Smith makes the case that abundance provides an essential explanatory perspective on ancient peoples' choices and activities. Focusing on plentitude enables the understanding of cohesive behaviors that were equally important for the development of social complexity"--Provided by publisher
"Using case studies from around the globe and multiple time periods, Smith makes the case that abundance provides an essential explanatory perspective on ancient peoples' choices and activities. Focusing on plentitude enables the understanding of cohesive behaviors that were equally important for the development of social complexity." - Provided by publisher
In: IEMA Proceedings volume 10
In: The Institute for European and Mediterranean Archaeology distinguished monograph series
Introduction: Archaeology and Anthropology: Divorce and Partial ReconciliationDavid Shankland (University of Bristol, UK)Big Revolutions, Two Small Disciplines and SocialismChris Hann (Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology, Germany)Whose Rights to Which Past? Archaeologists, Anthropologists, and the Ethics of Heritage in the Global Hierarchy of ValueMichael Herzfeld (Harvard University, USA)Archaeology and Anthropology: the state Of the RelationshipIan Hodder (University of Stanford, USA)No More Ancient; No More Human: the Future Past of Archaeology and AnthropologyTim Ingold (Aberdeen University, UK)Sacred Architecture: Archaeological and Anthropological PerspectivesRichard Irvine (University of Cambridge, UK)Life with Things: Archaeology and MaterialityRosemary Joyce (University of California, Berkeley, USA)Archaeological Ethnography: Materiality, Heritage and Hybrid Methodologies Lynn Meskell (Stanford University, USA)The Anthropological Imagination and British Iron Age SocietyPaul Sillitoe (Durham University, UK)The Interdisciplinary Value of SpaceStella Souvatzi (Hellenic Open University/Open University of Cyprus, Cyprus) Encountering the Past: Unearthing Remnants of Humans in Archaeology and AnthropologyPaola Filippucci (Cambridge University, UK), Joost Fontein (University of Edinburgh, UK), John Harries (University of Edinburgh, UK) and Cara Krmpotich (University of Oxford, UK)Archaeology, Anthropology and Material ThingsJulian Thomas (Manchester University, UK)Index
In: American experience in archaeological perspective
In: The American Experience in Archaeological Perspective Ser.
Cover -- The Archaeology of Prostitution and Clandestine Pursuits -- Title -- Copyright -- Contents -- List of Figures -- Foreword -- Acknowledgments -- 1. Agency and the Archaeology of the Unconventional -- 2. The Archaeology of Prostitution in American Cities -- 3. Case Studies: A Brothel in New York City's Most Notorious Neighborhood and Parlor Houses within Sight of the White House -- 4. Brothels and Prostitution in the American West -- 5. Clandestine Pursuits: Public Defiance of the Rules -- 6. Clandestine Pursuits: Private Spaces -- 7. Selling Sex and Keeping Secrets -- References Cited -- Index.
Introduction : why networks? / Carl Knappett -- Social network analysis and the practice of history / John Edward Terrell -- 'O what a tangled web we weave' : towards a practice that does not deceive / Leif Isaksen -- Broken links and black boxes : material affiliations and contextual network synthesis in the Viking world / Søren M. Sindbæk -- Positioning power in a multi-relational framework : a social network analysis of classic Maya political rhetoric / Jonathan B. Scholnick, Jessica L. Munson, and Martha J. Macri -- What makes a site important? : centrality, gateways, and gravity / Ray Rivers, Carl Knappett, and Tim Evans -- Evolution of prestige good systems : an application of network analysis to the transformation of communication systems and their media / Koji Mizoguchi -- The dynamics of social networks in the late Prehispanic U.S. Southwest / Barbara J. Mills, John M. Roberts Jr., Jeffery J. Clark, William R. Haas Jr., Deborah Huntley, Matthew A. Peeples, Lewis Borck, Susan C. Ryan, Meaghan Trowbridge, and Ronald L. Breiger -- Social networks, path dependence, and the rise of ethnic groups in pre-Roman Italy / Emma Blake -- Re-thinking Jewish ethnicity through social network analysis / Anna Collar -- Grounding the net : social networks, material culture, and geography in the Epipalaeolithic and early Neolithic of the Near East (21-6,000 cal BCE) / Fiona Coward -- Evaluating adaptive network strategies with geochemical sourcing data : a case study from the Kuril Islands / Erik Gjesfjeld and S. Colby Phillips -- Old boy networks in the indigenous Caribbean / Angus Mol and Jimmy Mans -- Archaeology, networks, information processing, and beyond / Sander van der Leeuw
In: World Archaeological Congress research handbooks in archaeology
In: Social archaeology
In: Smithsonian series in archaeological inquiry