From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 14
Page 111
My fundamental assumption here is that ' tribal reality ' has precedence over all
the languages that have been used to ... There is nothing inherently true or '
objective ' about the constitution of one language in that it is more appropriate or
...
My fundamental assumption here is that ' tribal reality ' has precedence over all
the languages that have been used to ... There is nothing inherently true or '
objective ' about the constitution of one language in that it is more appropriate or
...
Page 114
What I am saying is if there is excessive ' visuality ' in archaeology which , in
ethnography , supersedes the adequacy of language , then film may well be a
different and necessary means of access to ethnographic reality . as as While the
...
What I am saying is if there is excessive ' visuality ' in archaeology which , in
ethnography , supersedes the adequacy of language , then film may well be a
different and necessary means of access to ethnographic reality . as as While the
...
Page 129
... clearly the conditions under which languages could have changed in
prehistoric Europe , and addressed the problem ... of a common proto - language
( proto - Indo - European ) , she has worked out a detailed scheme of successive
waves ...
... clearly the conditions under which languages could have changed in
prehistoric Europe , and addressed the problem ... of a common proto - language
( proto - Indo - European ) , she has worked out a detailed scheme of successive
waves ...
What people are saying - Write a review
We haven't found any reviews in the usual places.
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
academic accept active analysis Anglo-Saxon anthropology appear approach Archaeological Review archaeology argues associated assumptions attempt authors Aztec become Berlin Book burials Cambridge cemetery centre century concerned constructed contained context continuity contribution cremation critical cultural discussion division domain domestic early ethnographic evidence example excavation exhibit exist experience female feminist Figure gender relations German given grave Hill human identity important individual inhumations interest interpretation issues Japanese knowledge labour language living look major male marxism material means medieval Museum nature objects organisation Origins particular past perhaps perspective political possible practice prehistory present problems production questions reference reflected relationships represented Review Review from Cambridge role seen social society space specific structures suggests texts theory traditional understand University Press Viking volume West Woman women York