
Craft Production in Complex Societies
Multicraft and Producer Perspectives
Izumi Shimada(Editor)
University of Utah Press,U.S.
Published on 1. September 2007
Book
Hardback
304 pages
978-0-87480-921-3 (ISBN)
Description
The study of craft production is a complex and challenging one that illuminates key aspects of the material, organizational, and ideological interests, values, and capacities of a given culture. Many crafts are treated as separate, but are actually practiced concurrently and in close proximity to each other, facilitating crucial interaction. There is a need for a balanced evaluation of the roles of producer and consumer in craft production, and the importance of properly contextualized workshop excavations and the definition of the entire sequence of operation in documenting craft production both as a social and material process. Craft Production in Complex Societies redresses the skewed conception and approach to craft production that have been shaped by studies focused on separate, single medium crafts, finished products, and the consumer. It presents case studies and regional syntheses from diverse geographical areas, time periods, and sociopolitical complexities that break important new ground in the anthropological study of the creative role and social identity of the producer and multi-craft production. It is expected to serve as a key reference in craft studies for many years to come.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Salt Lake City
United States
ISBN-13
978-0-87480-921-3 (9780874809213)
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Schweitzer Classification
Person
Izumi Shimada is professor of anthropology at Southern Illinois University-Carbondale.
Content
List of Illustrations List of Tables Introduction Section I. Case Studies in Multicraft and Related Production 1. Multicrafting, Migration, and Indentity in the American Southwest 2. Middle Sic\u00e1n Multicrafting Production: Resource Management and Labor Organization 3. A Community of Potters or Multicrafting Wives of Polygynous Lords? 4. Craft Production in Classic Period Oaxaca: Implications for Monte Alb\u00e1n's Political Economy 5. Classic Maya Elite Competition, Collaborations, and Performance in Multicraft Production Section II. Regional and Diachronic Syntheses 6. Structures of Craft Production, Society, and Political Control: Late Prehistoric and Early Roman Temperate Europe 7. Multiple Crafts and Socioeconomic Association in the Indus Civilization: New Perspectives from Harappa, Pakistan 8. Co-Craft and Multicraft: Section-Mold Casting and the Organization of Craft Production at the Shang Capital of Anyang Section III: Complementary Approaches to and Perspectives on Multicraft Production 9. Diachronic Change in Crafts and Centers in South-Central Veracruz, Mexico 10. It's All in a Day's Work: Occupational Specialization on the Peruvian North Coast, Revisited Contributors Index