Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volume 3Department of Archaeology, 1984 - Archaeology |
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Page 4
... implications of this for the History of Archaeology should be obvious : if the Sciences , which have been the major proponents of a progressionist approach to disciplinary history , are now seeking a re- analysis of their development in ...
... implications of this for the History of Archaeology should be obvious : if the Sciences , which have been the major proponents of a progressionist approach to disciplinary history , are now seeking a re- analysis of their development in ...
Page 37
change and an increasing resistance to the implications of the modern age . Quite what the implications of this might be for our understanding of the development of Archaeology as a discipline in the early 20th century are , of course ...
change and an increasing resistance to the implications of the modern age . Quite what the implications of this might be for our understanding of the development of Archaeology as a discipline in the early 20th century are , of course ...
Page 55
... implications . First , it created an enheightened sense of the tension between ' what really happened in the past ' and what people ' said had happened in the past ' , raising questions about the ' truth ' of histories ; thus the ...
... implications . First , it created an enheightened sense of the tension between ' what really happened in the past ' and what people ' said had happened in the past ' , raising questions about the ' truth ' of histories ; thus the ...
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18th century action aerial Ancient Monument Administration antiquarian studies Antiquity approach archaeo Archaeological Review Arthur Drew aspect attempt behaviour British central chorographies concepts concerning consciousness contemporary context critical historiography cultural D.H. Lawrence Danish Archaeology debate Denmark development of archaeology disciplinary discipline discussion Druids E.M. Forster emphasised England English essential ethnoarchaeology excavation framework Giddens Hardy historiography of archaeology history of archaeology human hunter-gatherer ideas identity ideological implications important intellectual interest interpretation Iron Age knowledge Kristiansen Kuhn's Kung landscape linked London major material motivation nature Neolithic Oxford paper paradigm particular past pattern period perspective philosophical Piggott political potential prehistoric present problem production publication relevance Rescue Archaeology Review from Cambridge role Roman Scandinavian Archaeology scientific seen sense settlement seventeenth century significance Sklenar social society Sørensen specific Stonehenge structure T.S. Kuhn theory Tim Reynolds tradition Tudor University Press volume whiggish William Hale White