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Rare and modern books

Campana, D. (Ed.) U.A.

Anthropological Approaches to Zooarchaeology. Complexity, Colonialism, and Animal Transformations.

Oxbow Books, 2010.,

70.00 €

Bookshop Buch Fundus

(Berlin, Germany)

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Details

ISBN
9781842173909
Author
Campana, D. (Ed.) U.A.
Publishers
Oxbow Books, 2010.
Size
XII; 274 S.; Illustr.; Tab.; 30 cm; fadengeh., illustr. Orig.-Pappband.
Keyword
Geschichte, Zoologie, Arch�ogie
Dust jacket
No
Languages
German
Inscribed
No
First edition
No

Description

Gutes Exemplar. - Englisch. - Animals in complex human societies are often both meal and symbol, related to everyday practice and ritual. People in such societies may be characterized as having unequal access to such resources, or else the meaning of animals may differ for component groups. Here, in this book, 28 peer-reviewed papers that span 4 continents and the Caribbean islands explore in different ways how animals were incorporated into the diets and religions of many unique societies. The temporal range is from the Neolithic to the Spanish colonization of the New World as well as to modern tourist trade in indigenous animal art. The volume explores various themes including the interaction of foodways with complex societies, the interaction between diet and colonialism and the complex role that animals, and parts of animals, play in all human societies as religious, identity markers, or other types of symbols. Organized according to these themes, rather than geographic location or time period, the papers presented here crosscut such divisions. In so doing, this book presents an opportunity for scholars divided by geography especially, but also by temporal period, to explore each other's research and demonstrate that different archaeological settings can address the same problems cross-culturally. (Verlagstext) // INHALT : CONTRIBUTORS --- INTRODUCTORY COMMENTS --- Animals and Complexity: How Zooarchaeologists Contribute to the Study of Complex Society in the New --- and Old Worlds --- by Justin Lev-Tov and Susan D. deFrance --- PART I: ARCHAEOZOOLOGY AND SOCIAL COMPLEXITY --- (editors Susan D. deFrance and Justin Lev-Tov) --- A Bird's Eye View of Ritual at the Cahokia Site (Lucretia S. Kelly) --- The Organization of Animal Production in an Early Urban Center: The Zooarchaeological Evidence from Early Bronze Age Titris Hoyiik, Southeastern Turkey --- (Adam Allentuck and Haskel J. Greenfield) --- Animal-Derived Artefacts at Two Pre-Columbian Sites in the Ancient Savannas of Central Panama. An Update on their Relevance to Studies of Social Hierarchy and Cultural Attitudes Towards Animals (Richard Cooke and Maximo Jimenez) --- Body Parts, Placements and People in an Iron Age Town in Bulgaria (Sue Stallibrass) --- Status and Diet at the Workers' Town, Giza, Egypt (Richard Redding) --- Chiefly Fare or Who's Feeding the Cacique? Equality in Animal Use at the Tibes Ceremonial Center, Puerto Rico --- (Susan D. deFrance) --- A Plebeian Perspective on Empire Economies: Faunal Remains from Tel Miqne-Ekron, Israel (Justin Lev-Tov) --- Continuity and Change in Faunal Consumption Patterns at the Pre-Inka and Inka Site of Yoroma, Bolivia (Jose M. Capriles, Alejandro 1. Domic, and Sonia Alconini) --- Living on the Frontier: "Scythian" and "Celtic" Animal Exploitation in Iron Age Northeastern Hungary (Ldszlo Bartosiewicz and Erika Gal) --- PART II: ZOOARCHAEOLOGY AND COLONIALISM (editors Pom J. Crabtree and Douglas V. Campana) --- Archaeozoology and Colonialism: An Introduction (Douglas V. Campana) --- Craving for Hunger: A Zooarchaeological Study at the the Edge of the Spanish Empire (Mariana E. De Nigris, Paula S. Palombo, and Maria X. Senatore) --- Zooarchaeology in the Spanish Borderlands of the American Southwest: Challenges and Opportunities (Diane Gifford-Gonzalez) --- Animal Husbandry at Pimeria Alta Missions: El Ganado en el Sudoeste de Norteamerica (Barnet Pavao-Zuckerman) --- The Adoption and Use of Domestic Animals at Zuni (Carmen Tarcan and Jonathan Driver) --- "Romanizing" Ancient Carthage: Evidence from Zooarchaeological Remains (Michael MacKinnon) --- (Kyra Lyublyanovics) --- Zooarchaeology and Colonialism in Roman Britain: Evidence from Icklingham (Pom J. Crabtree) --- PART III: ANIMAL TRANSFORMATIONS --- (editor Alice Choyke) --- The Bone is the Beast: Animal Amulets and Ornaments in Power and Magic (Alice Choyke) --- Skeletal Manipulations of Dogs at the Bronze Age Site of Szazhalombatta-Foldvar in Hungary (Maria Vretemark and Sabine Sten) --- Bovid Skulls in Southeastern European Neolithic Dwellings: The Case of the Subterranean Circular Room at Promachon-Topolnica in the Strymon Valley, Greece --- (Katerina Trantalidou) --- Symbolism of Sharks for Fisher-Gatherer Groups from the Sao Paulo Coast, Brazil (Manoel M. B. Gonzalez) --- Tupilak Transformations: Traditional Ivory Objects as Modern Souvenirs (Bonnie C. Yates and Margaret E. Sims) --- The Birds and Animals in Ancient Armenian Art (Ninna Manaseryan) --- The Transformations of the Quetzal Bird (Carmen Aguilera) --- Pets in Pots: Superstitious Belief in a Medieval Christian (12th-14th century) Village in Hungary (Mdrta Daroczi-Szabo) --- "Left" is "Right": The Symbolism behind Side Choice among Ancient Animal Sacrifices (Michael MacKinnon) --- The Composition and Interpretation of Associated Bone Groups from Wessex (James Morris) --- Making Themselves at Home: The Archaeology of Commensal Vertebrates (Terry O'Connor). ISBN 9781842173909