
Material Meanings
Elizabeth Chilton(Author)
University of Utah Press,U.S.
Will be published approx. on 14. October 1999
Book
Paperback/Softback
192 pages
978-0-87480-608-3 (ISBN)
Description
Material Meanings focuses on the social context in which things are produced and in which they are given meaning.
With firm roots in antiquarianism, archaeology began as the study and collection of things. Even today objects take center stage in many areas of archaeological inquiry. But the past few decades have seen a proliferation of the ways anthropological archaeologist analyze raw materials, tools, techniques, finished products, and discarded objects.
Material Meanings examines current approaches to material culture in the archaeological record from three perspective: ethnoarchaeology and technological traditions, material science, and theoretical approaches to materiality. The focus of this book is not on artifacts themselves but on the social context in which things are produced and in which they are given meaning, the technical choices of an artifact producer within a larger technical system, and their interpretation by modern researchers.
The chapters represent a broad range of theoretical perspectives, methods, and data sets. Several chapters consider methodological issues in reconstructing technical systems. Most contributions, however, apply this understanding to larger questions of social identity and ethnicity, emphasizing historical context or models of cultural process.
With firm roots in antiquarianism, archaeology began as the study and collection of things. Even today objects take center stage in many areas of archaeological inquiry. But the past few decades have seen a proliferation of the ways anthropological archaeologist analyze raw materials, tools, techniques, finished products, and discarded objects.
Material Meanings examines current approaches to material culture in the archaeological record from three perspective: ethnoarchaeology and technological traditions, material science, and theoretical approaches to materiality. The focus of this book is not on artifacts themselves but on the social context in which things are produced and in which they are given meaning, the technical choices of an artifact producer within a larger technical system, and their interpretation by modern researchers.
The chapters represent a broad range of theoretical perspectives, methods, and data sets. Several chapters consider methodological issues in reconstructing technical systems. Most contributions, however, apply this understanding to larger questions of social identity and ethnicity, emphasizing historical context or models of cultural process.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Salt Lake City
United States
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
35 figures, 11 tables
Dimensions
Height: 254 mm
Width: 178 mm
Thickness: 15 mm
Weight
350 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-87480-608-3 (9780874806083)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Elizabeth Chilton is assistant professor of anthropology at Harvard University.
Content
List of Figures
List of Tables
Preface
1. Material Meanings and Meaningful Materials: An Introduction ~ Elizabeth S. Chilton
2. Of Paradigms and Ways of Seeing: Artifact Variability as if People Mattered ~ Marcia-Anne Dobres
3. Social Dimensions of Technical Choice in Kalinga Ceramic Traditions ~ Miriam T. Stark
4. One Size Fits All: Typology and Alternatives for Ceramic Research ~ Elizabeth S. Chilton
5. Testing Interpretative Assumptions of Neutron Activation Analysis: Contemporary Pottery in YucatAn, 1964-1994 ~ Dean D. Arnold, Hector A. Neff, Ronald L. Bishop,and Michael D. Galscock
6. Formal and Technological Variability and the Social Relations of Production: Crisoles from San JosE de Moro, Peru ~ Cathy Lynne Costin
7. On Typologies, Selection, and Ethnoarchaeology in Ceramic Production Studies ~ Philip J. Arnold III
8. Style in Archaeology or Archaeologists in Style ~ H. Martin Wobst
9. An End Note: Reframing Materiality for Archaeology ~ Margaret W. Conkey
References
Index
Contributors
List of Tables
Preface
1. Material Meanings and Meaningful Materials: An Introduction ~ Elizabeth S. Chilton
2. Of Paradigms and Ways of Seeing: Artifact Variability as if People Mattered ~ Marcia-Anne Dobres
3. Social Dimensions of Technical Choice in Kalinga Ceramic Traditions ~ Miriam T. Stark
4. One Size Fits All: Typology and Alternatives for Ceramic Research ~ Elizabeth S. Chilton
5. Testing Interpretative Assumptions of Neutron Activation Analysis: Contemporary Pottery in YucatAn, 1964-1994 ~ Dean D. Arnold, Hector A. Neff, Ronald L. Bishop,and Michael D. Galscock
6. Formal and Technological Variability and the Social Relations of Production: Crisoles from San JosE de Moro, Peru ~ Cathy Lynne Costin
7. On Typologies, Selection, and Ethnoarchaeology in Ceramic Production Studies ~ Philip J. Arnold III
8. Style in Archaeology or Archaeologists in Style ~ H. Martin Wobst
9. An End Note: Reframing Materiality for Archaeology ~ Margaret W. Conkey
References
Index
Contributors