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El. knyga: Gender in African Prehistory

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  • Formatas: EPUB+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 01-Jan-2000
  • Leidėjas: AltaMira Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780585245867
  • Formatas: EPUB+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 01-Jan-2000
  • Leidėjas: AltaMira Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780585245867

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Gender in African Prehistory provides methods and theories for delineating and discussing prehistoric gender relations and their change through time. Sites studied range from Egypt to South Africa and Ghana to Tanzania, while time periods span the Stone Age to the period just prior to colonialization.

Recenzijos

Gender in African Prehistory is the first attempt to focus archaeological research on this theme in Africa. * European Journal of Archaeology * Susan Kent should be commended for the bringing us the first edited volume to focus on gender in African archaeology. <... Gender in African Prehistory also contributes greatly to the discipline in its focus on social relations as impetus for cultural change.... -- Kathryn Weedman * Women's Studies Quarterly * Gender in African Prehistory is aimed at archaeologists, but anyone interested in the topic should find it useful. <... Kent demonstrates that everyone canand shouldincorporate gender into research on ancient cultural systems and culture change. There is much food for thought here.... -- Marcia-Anne Dobres, (University of California at Berkeley) * Scientific American Discovering Archaeology, Mar./April 2000 * A significant contribution to a growing body of literature on the archaeological analysis of gender roles and concepts, and a very welcome addition to the corpus of Africanist archaeological texts. * American Antiquity * Kudos to Kent and her contributors for explicitly considering the relevance of gender to the contours of African prehistory....The spatial, temporal, and topical coverage is extremely broad, making the volume attractive to practically anyone interested in African prehistory, ethnoarchaeology or its recent colonial past. -- Marcia-Anne Dobres * Journal of Anthropological Research * This is a welcome book. It draws attention to gender-specific research going on in African archaeology and some of the reasons why gender has not been at the forefront of reasearch there. The editor and those who wrote for this volume are to be applauded for putting together what surely will be a well-read first step toward taking gender and other social and cognitive issues to the center of African archaeologies. -- Adria LaViolette, Department of Anthropology, University of Virginia * American Anthropologist, Vol. 101, No. 4 * Susan Kent should be commended for the bringing us the first edited volume to focus on gender in African archaeology. Gender in African Prehistory also contributes greatly to the discipline in its focus on social relations as impetus for cultural change. -- Kathryn Weedman * Women's Studies Quarterly * Gender in African Prehistory is aimed at archaeologists, but anyone interested in the topic should find it useful. Kent demonstrates that everyone canand shouldincorporate gender into research on ancient cultural systems and culture change. There is much food for thought here. -- Marcia-Anne Dobres, (University of California at Berkeley) * Scientific American Discovering Archaeology, Mar./April 2000 * Gender in African Prehistory brings together the work of a number of excellent scholars who have devoted considerable thought to issues of gender relations in past African societies, their real and possible manifestations in the archaelogical record, and the best methods to tease out relevant data. -- S. Terry Childs, Archaeology and Ethnography Program, National Park Service * Journal of Field Archaeology, Vol. 26 * A very strong volume. The articles are interesting and challenging in their own right and, together, they become a vibrant and articulate concern with developing approaches that bring the richness out of the archaeological record without framing it within any set discourse, be it colonial or gender. -- M.L. Stig Sorensen, (University of Cambridge) * Antiquity *

INTRODUCTION
Chapter 1 Gender and Prehistory in Africa 9(16) Susan Kent PERSPECTIVES OF GENDER FROM THE AFRICAN ARCHAEOLOGICAL RECORD 25(236)
Chapter 2 Resolving the Past: Gender in the Stone Age Archaeological Record of the Western Cape 25(14) John Parkington
Chapter 3 Invisible Gender--Invisible Foragers: Southern African Hunter-Gatherer Spatial Patterning and the Archaeological Record 39(30) Susan Kent
Chapter 4 The Invisible Meat Providers: Women in the Stone Age of South Africa 69(14) Lyn Wadley
Chapter 5 Just a Formality: The Presence of Fancy Projectile Points in a Basic Tool Assemblage 83(22) Joanna Casey
Chapter 6 Social Variability Among Holocene Saharan Groups: How to Recognize Gender 105(10) Barbara Barich
Chapter 7 Gender and Early Pastoralists in East Africa 115(24) Diane Gifford-Gonzalez
Chapter 8 Reading Gender in the Ancient Iron Technology of Africa 139(24) Peter Schmidt
Chapter 9 Gendered Technologies and Gendered Activities in the Interlacustrine Early Iron Age 163(16) Rachel MacLean
Chapter 10 Engendered Spaces Bodily Practices in the Iron Age of Southern African 179(26) Paul Lane
Chapter 11 Men and Women in a Market Economy: Gender and Craft Production in West Central Ghana c. 1775-1995 205(22) Ann B. Stahl Maria das Dores Cruz
Chapter 12 Daughters of Cattle: The Significance of Herding in the Growth of Complex Societies in Southern Africa Between the 10th and 15th Centuries AD 227(8) Alinah Segobye
Chapter 13 A Consideration of Gender Relations in the Late Iron Age Sotho Sequence of the Western Highveld, South Africa 235(26) Simon Hall COMMENTARIES AND PERSPECTIVES 261(34)
Chapter 14 Toward an Archaeology of Gender in Africa 261(18) Fekri Hassan
Chapter 15 Views of Gender in African Prehistory from a Middle Eastern Perspective 279(6) Ofer Bar-Yosef Anna Belfer-Cohen
Chapter 16 Reflections on Gender Studies in African and Asian Archaeology 285(10) Sarah Milledge Nelson Bibliography 295(48) About the Authors 343(6) Index 349
Susan Kent is Professor of Anthropology at Old Dominion University.