Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volumes 21-22Department of Archaeology, 2006 - Archaeology |
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Page 38
... effect of turning present archaeological sites into isolated , abstracted , past spaces . Influenced by Ingold's ( 1993 ) work on the taskscape , I prefer to conceptualise past spaces as inhabited landscapes . However my study of the ...
... effect of turning present archaeological sites into isolated , abstracted , past spaces . Influenced by Ingold's ( 1993 ) work on the taskscape , I prefer to conceptualise past spaces as inhabited landscapes . However my study of the ...
Page 120
... effect on people ; they were not simply used by people for a particular effect . So architecture had a form that could affect technology , or put another way , architecture was a social technology because its form could affect society ...
... effect on people ; they were not simply used by people for a particular effect . So architecture had a form that could affect technology , or put another way , architecture was a social technology because its form could affect society ...
Page 141
... effect on the intellectual legacy of their regime . However , she also emphasises that the physical elimination of archaeologists ( i.e. under Pol Pot ) , despite the regime's length will have equally dramatic long - term effects ...
... effect on the intellectual legacy of their regime . However , she also emphasises that the physical elimination of archaeologists ( i.e. under Pol Pot ) , despite the regime's length will have equally dramatic long - term effects ...
Contents
Building technologies quick architecture and Early Neolithic long barrow sites in Southern | 117 |
Book Reviews and Notes | 135 |
Archaeological Review from Cambridge 21 1 | 137 |
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activity analysis ancient appears approach Archaeological Review archaeology architecture argued associated authors become body British building burial Cambridge 22.2 casts cemetery chaîne opératoire chamber chapter communities concepts considered construction context created culture dead death discussion early effect emotional evidence example excavation experience Figure figurines focus forensic further gestures grave groups human identity important individual interesting interpretation involved island issues Italy Journal landscape Late later living London Marxism material meaning medieval memory monuments Museum nature Neolithic objects original Oxford particular past period Pleistocene political possible practice prehistoric present production provides questions recent remains represented response result Review from Cambridge ritual role social society space stone structure suggest symbolic techniques theory tombs traditional types understanding University Press volume York