Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volumes 14-15Department of Archaeology, 1997 - Archaeology |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 69
Page 134
... possible to integrate textual and material sources . The conceptual tools and methods are outlined in this volume . It is possible to " read " material culture with the right methods at hand . All contributors of this volume prove that ...
... possible to integrate textual and material sources . The conceptual tools and methods are outlined in this volume . It is possible to " read " material culture with the right methods at hand . All contributors of this volume prove that ...
Page 48
... possible that oral traditions keep fairly accurate memories of particular important events , such as volcanic eruptions , for many centuries ( Bell & Walker 1992 : 132 ) . But it has of course long been recognised that despite all ...
... possible that oral traditions keep fairly accurate memories of particular important events , such as volcanic eruptions , for many centuries ( Bell & Walker 1992 : 132 ) . But it has of course long been recognised that despite all ...
Page 111
... possible to dismiss the comments I have made so far as trivial or simply personal grounds for criticizing the way archaeology is written about in academia , it will not be possible to dismiss the blows I am about to deal now . For it ...
... possible to dismiss the comments I have made so far as trivial or simply personal grounds for criticizing the way archaeology is written about in academia , it will not be possible to dismiss the blows I am about to deal now . For it ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
acoustical Africa analysis ancient Anthropology approach archaeological evidence archaeological record Archaeological Review archaeological writing architecture areas argued artefacts Beowulf bone Bronze Age buildings burial Cambridge University Press century cognitive cognitive archaeology concept construction context Contributions disability discipline discussion economic environment ethnic example excavation figurines historians History of Archaeology Hodder human impairment important individual interest Interpreting Archaeology Iron Age issues landscape London Lower Nubia material culture meaning medieval megalithic art memory Meroitic monuments Museum Neolithic Nubia organisation Oxford Palaeolithic papers past perception perceptual framework period perspective Phenomenology political pottery prehistoric present problems processual archaeology production prospective memory Qasr Ibrim recognised relationship representation retrospective memory Review from Cambridge Roman Romanesque Routledge settlement social society sources space structure style suggests symbolic temples textual theoretical theory Tilley traditional Trigger understanding University of Cambridge visual volume