Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volume 6Department of Archaeology - Archaeology |
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Page 32
... practice resides in its unique time depth . Indeed time is essential to archaeology : it constitutes part of the reason for its existence . One might expect that a discipline so deeply implicated in and concerned with time to have a ...
... practice resides in its unique time depth . Indeed time is essential to archaeology : it constitutes part of the reason for its existence . One might expect that a discipline so deeply implicated in and concerned with time to have a ...
Page 37
commensurable . Accounting practices and orientation to abstractly commensurable exchange - values are inapplicable ... practice , the social and historical production of time . Levi- Strauss writes : The characteristic feature of the ...
commensurable . Accounting practices and orientation to abstractly commensurable exchange - values are inapplicable ... practice , the social and historical production of time . Levi- Strauss writes : The characteristic feature of the ...
Page 53
... practices as polygyny , thereby increasing the potential for intra - group competition . Of the several strategies generally ... practice would have introduced factors into the planning process that are not considered within the formal ...
... practices as polygyny , thereby increasing the potential for intra - group competition . Of the several strategies generally ... practice would have introduced factors into the planning process that are not considered within the formal ...
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Common terms and phrases
abstract allocation analysis Anthony Sinclair Anthropology archaeo archaeological record Archaeological Review argued argument attitudes Bailey behaviour calendrical Cambridge 6:1 Cambridge University Press causal Chatelperronian Christopher Tilley chronology complex concepts concerning contemporary context contextual approach contextual archaeology criticism discussion domestic cycle dynastic economic Economic Anthropology emic emphasise ethnohistoric etic Europe example explanation framework future gentry Goody groups Hodder human Ian Hodder important Indians individual interactions interest interpretation involved Kow Swamp Lewis Binford London Marakwet material culture Maya McGlade meaning Mesoamerica Mesoamerican methodological Michael Shanks middle range theory models Montmollin Native Americans notion organisation Palaeolithic perspective perspectivism phenomena political prehispanic problem processes processual approaches processual archaeology production Reading the Past reference refutationist method relation relationship relativism Review from Cambridge Simulations in Archaeology society spans spatial structuralist structure substantive uniformitarianism Szeletian temporal theoretical theory traditional understanding Upper Palaeolithic variables Zimmerman