Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volume 14, Issue 2Department of Archaeology, 1997 - Archaeology |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 25
Page 123
... fact that Joyce makes it clear that the piece had its origins as a hypertext document . To do so would seem to me to imply that the style could not have arisen without the benefit of advances in computer representation . Clearly much ...
... fact that Joyce makes it clear that the piece had its origins as a hypertext document . To do so would seem to me to imply that the style could not have arisen without the benefit of advances in computer representation . Clearly much ...
Page 152
... fact that it is capitalised . However , most references to it , both in professional histories of archaeology or in post- graduate theses , are rarely based on a reading of Thomsen's original publications ( either in Danish or in ...
... fact that it is capitalised . However , most references to it , both in professional histories of archaeology or in post- graduate theses , are rarely based on a reading of Thomsen's original publications ( either in Danish or in ...
Page 176
... fact emphasises the former and ignores the latter . Long term history , as seen by the Annales , has stalled and stopped , needing the spark generated by events to get it moving . The most common solution to the problem that Braudel's ...
... fact emphasises the former and ignores the latter . Long term history , as seen by the Annales , has stalled and stopped , needing the spark generated by events to get it moving . The most common solution to the problem that Braudel's ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
academic activities analysis approach Archaeological Review archaeological writing areas argued attempt become boring buildings Cambridge Category centre clearly cognitive concept concerned consider construction context Contributions created critical culture discipline discussion economic effects elements example existence fact Figure function further given groups history of archaeology Hodder houses human ideas important individual influence interest interpretation issues knowledge logic London Marxism material material culture meaning memory mind monuments museum nature objects organisation original Oxford particular past perception perhaps perspective political position possible pottery practice prehistoric present problems production question reader record reference reflect relationships role seen settlement social society space structure suggest theoretical theory thought Tilley tradition types understanding University Press various visitor volume