Atnaujinkite slapukų nuostatas

Past Bodies: Body-Centered Research in Archaeology [Minkštas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 160 pages, aukštis x plotis: 280x215 mm
  • Išleidimo metai: 31-Jan-2014
  • Leidėjas: Oxbow Books
  • ISBN-10: 178297542X
  • ISBN-13: 9781782975427
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 160 pages, aukštis x plotis: 280x215 mm
  • Išleidimo metai: 31-Jan-2014
  • Leidėjas: Oxbow Books
  • ISBN-10: 178297542X
  • ISBN-13: 9781782975427
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Archaeology often struggles in envisioning real people behind the world of material objects it studies. Even when dealing with skeletal remains archaeologists routinely reduce them to long lists of figures and attributes. Such a fragmentation of past subjects and their bodies, if analytically necessary, is hardly satisfactory.

Archaeology often struggles in envisioning real people behind the world of material objects it studies. Even when dealing with skeletal remains archaeologists routinely reduce them to long lists of figures and attributes. Such a fragmentation of past subjects and their bodies, if analytically necessary, is hardly satisfactory. While material culture is the main archaeological proxy to real people in the past, the absence of past bodies has been chronic in archaeological writings. At the same time, these past bodies in archaeology are omnipresent. Bodily matters are tangible in the archaeological record in a way most other theoretical centralities never appear to be. Ancient bodies surround us, in representations, in burials, in the remains of food preparation, cooking and consumption, in hands holding tools, in joint efforts of many individual bodies who built architecture and monuments. This collection of papers is a reaction to decades of the body's invisibility. It raises the body as the central topic in the study of past societies, researching its appearance in a wide variety of regional contexts and across vast spans of archaeological time. Contributions in this volume range from the deep Epi-Palaeolithic past of the Near East, through the European Neolithic and Bronze Age, Classical Greece and Late Medieval England, to pre-Columbian Central America, post-contact North America, and the most recent conflicts in the Balkans. In all these case studies, the materiality of the body is centre stage. Possibilities are highlighted for future study: by putting the body at the forefront of these archaeological studies an attempt is made to provoke the imagination and map out new territories.

Recenzijos

This is a compelling, chronologically broad and well-organised account of contemporary body-centred research in archaeology. It will be of value to a broad audience, from scholars interested in the body to students of archaeology and anthropology.' -- Archaeological Review from Cambridge Archaeological Review from Cambridge

List of Contributors
vii
1 Body theory in archaeology
1(8)
Dusan Boric
John Robb
2 The corporeal politics of being in the Neolithic
9(10)
Douglass Bailey
3 Changing beliefs in the human body in prehistoric Malta 5000--1500 BC
19(10)
Simon Stoddart
Caroline Malone
4 Idealism, the body and the beard in classical Greek art
29(8)
Robin Osborne
5 When the flesh is solid but the person is hollow inside: formal variation in hand-modelled figurines from Formative Mesoamerica
37(10)
Rosemary Joyce
6 Fractal bodies in the past and present
47(12)
Chris Fowler
7 From substantial bodies to the substance of bodies: analysis of the transition from inhumation to cremation during the Middle Bronze Age in Central Europe
59(10)
Marie Louise Stig Sørensen
Katharina C. Rebay
8 The extraordinary history of Oliver Cromwell's head
69(10)
Sarah Tarlow
9 Fresh scars on the body of archaeology: excavating mass-graves at Batajnica, Serbia
79(10)
Slobodan Mitrovic
10 Meaningless violence and the lived body: the Huron -- Jesuit collision of world orders
89(12)
John Robb
11 Bodily beliefs and agricultural beginnings in Western Asia: animal-human hybridity re-examined
101(14)
Preston Miracle
Dusan Boric
12 Is it `me' or is it `mine'? The Mycenaean sword as a body-part
115(10)
Lambros Malafouris
13 Embodied persons and heroic kings in Late Classic Maya imagery
125(10)
Susan D. Gillespie
14 Colonised bodies, personal and social
135(10)
Nan A. Rothschild
15 The challenge of embodying archaeology
145
Chris Shilling