Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volumes 19-20Department of Archaeology, 2004 - Archaeology |
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Page 57
... feasting as part of the wider negotiation of social and political relations . By giving meaning to a location through the act of feasting , one can perhaps make these new social and political relations more visible , tangible and ...
... feasting as part of the wider negotiation of social and political relations . By giving meaning to a location through the act of feasting , one can perhaps make these new social and political relations more visible , tangible and ...
Page 61
... feasting . Feasting locales may represent an extension of control over the countryside , possibly during the agricultural season when transhumant food producers were working the land , in effect maintaining control over agricultural ...
... feasting . Feasting locales may represent an extension of control over the countryside , possibly during the agricultural season when transhumant food producers were working the land , in effect maintaining control over agricultural ...
Page 38
... Feasting can imbue meaning into the objects used during feasting and could subsequently influence the technological or stylistic design of container crafts . Van Keuren ( 2004 ) has highlighted how feasting behaviour reshapes or ...
... Feasting can imbue meaning into the objects used during feasting and could subsequently influence the technological or stylistic design of container crafts . Van Keuren ( 2004 ) has highlighted how feasting behaviour reshapes or ...
Contents
Foreword | 1 |
How Little Does it Take to Represent a Face? | 9 |
Archaeology and Aesthetics | 12 |
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aesthetic experience aesthetic objects ancient Anthropology approach archaeological context Archaeological Review artefacts artist assemblages Avebury Britain British Bronze Age brooches burial Celtiberian cemeteries century coffee colonial concept construction consumption contemporary context Cornelia Parker created Deir el-Medina Department of Archaeology discussion drink early ethnicity evidence example excavation feasting Figure glass groups hapū heritage human hunter-gatherers identity illustrative representation images important individual interaction interpretation Iron Age Iron Age Britain khipu knowledge landscape landscape archaeology London Lundenwic Māori material culture mathematics means medieval Mesolithic modern monuments Museum nature Neolithic Oxford paintings particular past period perspective political pottery practice prehistoric produced region relations relationship represent Review from Cambridge Richard Long ritual Roman Roman Britain Routledge Saami sculpture Segeda settlement significant social society space stone structure symbolic theory traditional University of Cambridge University Press vessels whisky xenia Yolŋu