Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volume 15Department of Archaeology, 1998 - Archaeology |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 90
Page 27
... example , the body of the Medieval person was at once divine image and perishable flesh , sensuous and sinful ( Walker Bynum 1989 ) ; our own 20th century bodies , on the other hand , are objectified and individuated , smoothly running ...
... example , the body of the Medieval person was at once divine image and perishable flesh , sensuous and sinful ( Walker Bynum 1989 ) ; our own 20th century bodies , on the other hand , are objectified and individuated , smoothly running ...
Page 28
... examples . It is clear that the gap between the human agent and ' the world out there ' is neither conceptualised , mediated not transcended in any one universal way . For example , the perceived dichotomy between subject and object in ...
... examples . It is clear that the gap between the human agent and ' the world out there ' is neither conceptualised , mediated not transcended in any one universal way . For example , the perceived dichotomy between subject and object in ...
Page 88
... example , they may be absent from the record . For example , Turkel ( 1989 ) reports on the disposal of an anencephalic child with sacred animals rather than in the Hermopolis catacombs in Egypt where the rest of the population were ...
... example , they may be absent from the record . For example , Turkel ( 1989 ) reports on the disposal of an anencephalic child with sacred animals rather than in the Hermopolis catacombs in Egypt where the rest of the population were ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
acoustical Africa Americans and Archaeologists Anthropology archaeological record Archaeological Review architecture argues artefacts body bone Bronze Age buildings Cambridge University Press cemetery Chris Hayden Christine Brooke-Rose cognitive concepts construction context Contributions deformity disability discussion disease environment ethnic Evans evidence example experience figures figurines Foucault's Pendulum function gender heritage human images impairment individual interpretation issues Journal Knüsel landscape leprosy London Malta material culture meaning medieval megalithic art monuments museums naked seated Native Americans nature Neolithic obesity Oxford palaeopathology papers parietal art particular Passage Tomb past perceived perception perceptual framework person perspective Phenomenology physical political Poundbury prehistoric problems produce prone burial recognised relationship representation Review from Cambridge Roman Romanesque semiosis semiotic social model society space specific status structures suggests symbolic Tarxien theoretical Tilley Tom Shakespeare tomb Umberto Eco Upper Palaeolithic visual volume Zammit and Singer