Archaeology and ModernityRoutledge, 1. 3. 2004 - Počet stran: 288 This is the first book-length study to explore the relationship between archaeology and modern thought, showing how philosophical ideas that developed in the seventeenth to nineteenth centuries still dominate our approach to the material remains of ancient societies. Addressing current debates from a new viewpoint, Archaeology and Modernity discusses the modern emphasis on method rather than ethics or meaning, our understanding of change in history and nature, the role of the nation-state in forming our views of the past, and contemporary notions of human individuality, the mind, and materiality. |
Vyhledávání v knize
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Strana x
... prehistoric and protohistoric societies in counterintuitive ways, which emphasise gift exchange, ritual, the collective appropriation of resources, the meaningful character of landscape or the symbolic role of material things. However ...
... prehistoric and protohistoric societies in counterintuitive ways, which emphasise gift exchange, ritual, the collective appropriation of resources, the meaningful character of landscape or the symbolic role of material things. However ...
Strana 13
... prehistoric stone tools might have been displayed alongside one another, for instance. It might be more accurate to recognise the cabinet as a transitional cultural form which attempts to represent the entire world as a unified image ...
... prehistoric stone tools might have been displayed alongside one another, for instance. It might be more accurate to recognise the cabinet as a transitional cultural form which attempts to represent the entire world as a unified image ...
Strana 24
U této knihy jste dosáhli svého limitního počtu zobrazení..
U této knihy jste dosáhli svého limitního počtu zobrazení..
Strana 32
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U této knihy jste dosáhli svého limitního počtu zobrazení..
Strana 33
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U této knihy jste dosáhli svého limitního počtu zobrazení..
Obsah
1 | |
Archaeology and the tensions of modernity | 35 |
The tyranny of method | 55 |
History and nature | 78 |
Nationstates | 96 |
Humanism and the individual | 119 |
Depths and surfaces | 149 |
Mind perception and knowledge | 171 |
Materialities | 202 |
Difference ethics dialogue finitude | 223 |
Bibliography | 249 |
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achieved archaeological record archaeology argued argument artefacts aspects attributed Binford body Cartesian characteristic cognitive cognitive archaeology conception concerned consciousness Consequentially context created culture-history depth Descartes distinct eighteenth century emergence empiricism Enlightenment entities epistemology ethical evolutionary psychology excavation experience Foucault Freud GROOVED WARE Heidegger Hobbes Hodder human existence ibid ideas identified implication individual interpretation involved Kant kind knowledge laws material culture material things material world matter means Meskell metanarratives Middle Range Theory mind modern thought modern West moral nation-state nature neolithic objects organisation particular past person philosophy physical political prehistoric present present-at-hand processual archaeology reason recognised relations relationship Renaissance Renaissance humanism rendered Schnapp seen sense separate seventeenth century significant simply social social contract society specific stratigraphy structure substance suggest theory thinking three-age system tion tradition transformed understanding understood universal upper palaeolithic Western