Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volume 7Department of Archaeology, 1988 - Archaeology |
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Page 8
... appear to be the actors who create the social world , our task is neither to accept this fact as adequate in sociological terms nor to attempt , by female action , to deny it . Instead we must begin to analyse the social processes that ...
... appear to be the actors who create the social world , our task is neither to accept this fact as adequate in sociological terms nor to attempt , by female action , to deny it . Instead we must begin to analyse the social processes that ...
Page 12
... appear to us remarkably ethnocentric and at times embarrassingly androcentric . We must learn to appreciate that they , at the time , in their own way , were concerned with understanding the position of women only when we have accepted ...
... appear to us remarkably ethnocentric and at times embarrassingly androcentric . We must learn to appreciate that they , at the time , in their own way , were concerned with understanding the position of women only when we have accepted ...
Page 78
... appear to be an episodic phenomenon contemporary with the north - easterly expansion of the cremation burials in the sixth century . Inhumation burial appears to have ceased before the end of use of the area as a cremation cemetery at ...
... appear to be an episodic phenomenon contemporary with the north - easterly expansion of the cremation burials in the sixth century . Inhumation burial appears to have ceased before the end of use of the area as a cremation cemetery at ...
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academic Active Museum Addyman analysis androcentric Anglo-Saxon society anthropology approach Archaeological Review argues assumptions Aztec society behaviour Binford Book burials Cambridge 7:1 Cambridge University Press cemetery Christopher Chippindale Colin Renfrew concerned Conkey and Spector context cremation debate discourse discussion domestic domain ethnoarchaeology ethnographic evolutionary excavation exhibit feminism feminist archaeology film gender domains gender relations gender roles German Gestapo Gilchrist grave Grumblies Hodder human identity ideology important inhumations interpretation issues Japanese Jorvik Jorvik Viking Centre male and female marxism material culture McCafferty medieval methodology modern nature Nazi North Elmham numbers nunneries organisation Origins stories paper particular past perspective political prehistory present Prinz-Albrecht problems questions recognise reconstruction relationships reproduction Review from Cambridge Roberta Gilchrist Rosaldo Rürup Sahagun Sarah Taylor social Sørensen spatial Spong Hill structures suggests symbolic Taxila traditional understand Viking Centre volume West Berlin women World Archaeological Congress Xochiquetzal York