The Oxford Handbook of Material Culture Studies
Herausgeber: Hicks, Dan; Beaudry, Mary C
The Oxford Handbook of Material Culture Studies
Herausgeber: Hicks, Dan; Beaudry, Mary C
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- Produkterinnerung
Written by an international team of experts, the Handbook makes accessible a full range of theoretical and applied approaches to the study of material culture, and the place of materiality in social theory, presenting current thinking about material culture from the fields of archaeology, anthropology, geography, and science and technology studies.
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Written by an international team of experts, the Handbook makes accessible a full range of theoretical and applied approaches to the study of material culture, and the place of materiality in social theory, presenting current thinking about material culture from the fields of archaeology, anthropology, geography, and science and technology studies.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Sydney University Press
- Seitenzahl: 800
- Erscheinungstermin: 16. Oktober 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 243mm x 173mm x 40mm
- Gewicht: 1572g
- ISBN-13: 9780198822554
- ISBN-10: 0198822553
- Artikelnr.: 50847211
- Verlag: Sydney University Press
- Seitenzahl: 800
- Erscheinungstermin: 16. Oktober 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 243mm x 173mm x 40mm
- Gewicht: 1572g
- ISBN-13: 9780198822554
- ISBN-10: 0198822553
- Artikelnr.: 50847211
Dan Hicks is Associate Professor & Curator in Archaeology, School of Archaeology & Pitt Rivers Museum, University of Oxford. Mary C. Beaudry is Professor of Archaeology & Anthropology, Boston University.
* 1: Dan Hicks and Mary C. Beaudry: Introduction
* I. Disciplinary Perspectives
* 2: Dan Hicks: The Material-Cultural Turn
* 3: Ian Cook and Divya Tolia-Kelly: Material Geographies
* 4: Robert St George: Folklife
* 5: Ann Stahl: Material Histories
* 6: John Law: The Materials of STS
* II. Material Practices
* 7: Andrew Pickering: Material Culture and the Dance of Agency
* 8: Michael Dietler: Consumption
* 9: Gavin Lucas: Fieldwork and Collecting
* 10: Hirokazu Miyazaki: Gifts and Exchange
* 11: Howard Morphy: Art as Action, Art as Evidence
* 12: Rosemary Joyce with Joshua Pollard: Archaeological Assemblages
and Practices of Deposition
* III. Objects and Humans
* 13: Kacy L. Hollenback and Michael B. Schiffer: Technology ande
Material Life
* 14: Andy Jones and Nicole Boivin: The Malice of Inanimate Objects:
Material Agency
* 15: Chris Fowler: `Personhood' and Identity
* 16: Zoe Crossland: Materiality and Embodiment
* 17: Tatyana Hulme: Material Culture in Primates
* IV. Landscapes and the Built Environment
* 18: Lesley Head: Cultural Landscapes
* 19: Sarah Whatmore and Steve Hinchliffe: Ecological Landscapes
* 20: Roland Fletcher: Urban Materialities: Meaning, Magnitude,
Friction, and Outcomes
* 21: Carl Lounsbury: Architecture and Cultural History
* 22: Victor Buchli: Households and `Home Cultures'
* V. Studying Particular Things
* 23: Rodney Harrison: Stone Tools
* 24: Chandra Mukerji: The Landscape Garden as Material Culture:
Lessons from France
* 25: Douglass W. Bailey and Lesley McFadyen: Built Objects
* 26: Carl Knappett, Lambros Malafouris and Peter Tomkins: Ceramics (as
Containers)
* 27: Peter J. Pels: Magical Things: On Fetishes, Commodities, and
Computers
* Afterword: Fings Ain't Wot They Used t'Be: Thinking Through Material
Thinking as Placing and Arrangement
* I. Disciplinary Perspectives
* 2: Dan Hicks: The Material-Cultural Turn
* 3: Ian Cook and Divya Tolia-Kelly: Material Geographies
* 4: Robert St George: Folklife
* 5: Ann Stahl: Material Histories
* 6: John Law: The Materials of STS
* II. Material Practices
* 7: Andrew Pickering: Material Culture and the Dance of Agency
* 8: Michael Dietler: Consumption
* 9: Gavin Lucas: Fieldwork and Collecting
* 10: Hirokazu Miyazaki: Gifts and Exchange
* 11: Howard Morphy: Art as Action, Art as Evidence
* 12: Rosemary Joyce with Joshua Pollard: Archaeological Assemblages
and Practices of Deposition
* III. Objects and Humans
* 13: Kacy L. Hollenback and Michael B. Schiffer: Technology ande
Material Life
* 14: Andy Jones and Nicole Boivin: The Malice of Inanimate Objects:
Material Agency
* 15: Chris Fowler: `Personhood' and Identity
* 16: Zoe Crossland: Materiality and Embodiment
* 17: Tatyana Hulme: Material Culture in Primates
* IV. Landscapes and the Built Environment
* 18: Lesley Head: Cultural Landscapes
* 19: Sarah Whatmore and Steve Hinchliffe: Ecological Landscapes
* 20: Roland Fletcher: Urban Materialities: Meaning, Magnitude,
Friction, and Outcomes
* 21: Carl Lounsbury: Architecture and Cultural History
* 22: Victor Buchli: Households and `Home Cultures'
* V. Studying Particular Things
* 23: Rodney Harrison: Stone Tools
* 24: Chandra Mukerji: The Landscape Garden as Material Culture:
Lessons from France
* 25: Douglass W. Bailey and Lesley McFadyen: Built Objects
* 26: Carl Knappett, Lambros Malafouris and Peter Tomkins: Ceramics (as
Containers)
* 27: Peter J. Pels: Magical Things: On Fetishes, Commodities, and
Computers
* Afterword: Fings Ain't Wot They Used t'Be: Thinking Through Material
Thinking as Placing and Arrangement
* 1: Dan Hicks and Mary C. Beaudry: Introduction
* I. Disciplinary Perspectives
* 2: Dan Hicks: The Material-Cultural Turn
* 3: Ian Cook and Divya Tolia-Kelly: Material Geographies
* 4: Robert St George: Folklife
* 5: Ann Stahl: Material Histories
* 6: John Law: The Materials of STS
* II. Material Practices
* 7: Andrew Pickering: Material Culture and the Dance of Agency
* 8: Michael Dietler: Consumption
* 9: Gavin Lucas: Fieldwork and Collecting
* 10: Hirokazu Miyazaki: Gifts and Exchange
* 11: Howard Morphy: Art as Action, Art as Evidence
* 12: Rosemary Joyce with Joshua Pollard: Archaeological Assemblages
and Practices of Deposition
* III. Objects and Humans
* 13: Kacy L. Hollenback and Michael B. Schiffer: Technology ande
Material Life
* 14: Andy Jones and Nicole Boivin: The Malice of Inanimate Objects:
Material Agency
* 15: Chris Fowler: `Personhood' and Identity
* 16: Zoe Crossland: Materiality and Embodiment
* 17: Tatyana Hulme: Material Culture in Primates
* IV. Landscapes and the Built Environment
* 18: Lesley Head: Cultural Landscapes
* 19: Sarah Whatmore and Steve Hinchliffe: Ecological Landscapes
* 20: Roland Fletcher: Urban Materialities: Meaning, Magnitude,
Friction, and Outcomes
* 21: Carl Lounsbury: Architecture and Cultural History
* 22: Victor Buchli: Households and `Home Cultures'
* V. Studying Particular Things
* 23: Rodney Harrison: Stone Tools
* 24: Chandra Mukerji: The Landscape Garden as Material Culture:
Lessons from France
* 25: Douglass W. Bailey and Lesley McFadyen: Built Objects
* 26: Carl Knappett, Lambros Malafouris and Peter Tomkins: Ceramics (as
Containers)
* 27: Peter J. Pels: Magical Things: On Fetishes, Commodities, and
Computers
* Afterword: Fings Ain't Wot They Used t'Be: Thinking Through Material
Thinking as Placing and Arrangement
* I. Disciplinary Perspectives
* 2: Dan Hicks: The Material-Cultural Turn
* 3: Ian Cook and Divya Tolia-Kelly: Material Geographies
* 4: Robert St George: Folklife
* 5: Ann Stahl: Material Histories
* 6: John Law: The Materials of STS
* II. Material Practices
* 7: Andrew Pickering: Material Culture and the Dance of Agency
* 8: Michael Dietler: Consumption
* 9: Gavin Lucas: Fieldwork and Collecting
* 10: Hirokazu Miyazaki: Gifts and Exchange
* 11: Howard Morphy: Art as Action, Art as Evidence
* 12: Rosemary Joyce with Joshua Pollard: Archaeological Assemblages
and Practices of Deposition
* III. Objects and Humans
* 13: Kacy L. Hollenback and Michael B. Schiffer: Technology ande
Material Life
* 14: Andy Jones and Nicole Boivin: The Malice of Inanimate Objects:
Material Agency
* 15: Chris Fowler: `Personhood' and Identity
* 16: Zoe Crossland: Materiality and Embodiment
* 17: Tatyana Hulme: Material Culture in Primates
* IV. Landscapes and the Built Environment
* 18: Lesley Head: Cultural Landscapes
* 19: Sarah Whatmore and Steve Hinchliffe: Ecological Landscapes
* 20: Roland Fletcher: Urban Materialities: Meaning, Magnitude,
Friction, and Outcomes
* 21: Carl Lounsbury: Architecture and Cultural History
* 22: Victor Buchli: Households and `Home Cultures'
* V. Studying Particular Things
* 23: Rodney Harrison: Stone Tools
* 24: Chandra Mukerji: The Landscape Garden as Material Culture:
Lessons from France
* 25: Douglass W. Bailey and Lesley McFadyen: Built Objects
* 26: Carl Knappett, Lambros Malafouris and Peter Tomkins: Ceramics (as
Containers)
* 27: Peter J. Pels: Magical Things: On Fetishes, Commodities, and
Computers
* Afterword: Fings Ain't Wot They Used t'Be: Thinking Through Material
Thinking as Placing and Arrangement