Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volume 9Department of Archaeology, 1990 - Archaeology |
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Page 31
... extent to which technical acts are enmeshed within meaning . This notwith- standing , I would advance the following propositions : it is probable that the " meanings " avail- able de facto to the archaeologist are more limited than ...
... extent to which technical acts are enmeshed within meaning . This notwith- standing , I would advance the following propositions : it is probable that the " meanings " avail- able de facto to the archaeologist are more limited than ...
Page 67
... extent to which the juxtapo- sition of the two working methods , and the siting of quarries in inaccessible locations , might reflect a greater concern with demarcating those areas at the source in which it was appropriate for ...
... extent to which the juxtapo- sition of the two working methods , and the siting of quarries in inaccessible locations , might reflect a greater concern with demarcating those areas at the source in which it was appropriate for ...
Page 111
... extent to which such tools were indeed significant in the lifeways of Homo habilis or Homo erectus . Can such implements be considered to be expres- sive of the intellectual capacity of early hominids if technological skills were ...
... extent to which such tools were indeed significant in the lifeways of Homo habilis or Homo erectus . Can such implements be considered to be expres- sive of the intellectual capacity of early hominids if technological skills were ...
Contents
TECHNOLOGY IN THE HUMANITIES | 3 |
Nathan Schlanger | 18 |
Pierre Lemonnier | 27 |
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Common terms and phrases
Acheulean acquisition action on matter African archaeology analysis anthropology approach Archaeological Review argued artefacts aspects basis behaviour bifaces Cambridge 9:1 Cambridge University Press chaîne opératoire complex concept of technology context core debitage duration of apprenticeship East German Eastern Europe economic elements environment Etiolles evidence evolution evolutionary example flakes flintknapping Franchthi Cave function gesture Gowlett handaxe hominids human hunter-gatherers hunting and gathering individual industries Ingold innovation interpretation Karlin knapper knapping know-how knowledge Leroi-Gourhan lithic lithic analysis Magdalenian manufacture Marxism material culture Mauss meaning Mesolithic nature Neolithic object Oldowan operational organisation Palaeolithic Paris Pelegrin Perlès Pigeot possible practical prehistoric problem raw material relationship Review from Cambridge sequence simply skills social relations society spatial specific stone axes stone tools striking platform structure symbolic technical activities techniques techno-economic theoretical theory tion transformation understanding Upper Palaeolithic Wynn