Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volume 14, Issue 2Department of Archaeology, 1997 - Archaeology |
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Page 18
... meanings , grounded in , but also above and beyond , their utilitarian function . Such meaning is self - evident to individual members of the society and can be manipulated by them in the context of symbolic discourse . As Miller has ...
... meanings , grounded in , but also above and beyond , their utilitarian function . Such meaning is self - evident to individual members of the society and can be manipulated by them in the context of symbolic discourse . As Miller has ...
Page 55
... meaning of a text is determined by its readers rather than its author . The point is that a text has not one pre - determined meaning relating to the author's intentions and his or her social and cultural context , but many meanings ...
... meaning of a text is determined by its readers rather than its author . The point is that a text has not one pre - determined meaning relating to the author's intentions and his or her social and cultural context , but many meanings ...
Page 56
... meanings of various monuments in historical long - term perspectives ( 1993 , 1996a , 1996b ) . He believes that the ' cultural value ' of megaliths is determined by the meaning which each generation ascribes to them , i.e. it keeps ...
... meanings of various monuments in historical long - term perspectives ( 1993 , 1996a , 1996b ) . He believes that the ' cultural value ' of megaliths is determined by the meaning which each generation ascribes to them , i.e. it keeps ...
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