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Reflects the major changes happening in the historical archaeology of the Holy Land. This book represents a fundamental paradigm shift brought about by the application of objective science-based dating methods, geographic information systems, anthropological models, and an array of computer-based and digital technology tools.
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Reflects the major changes happening in the historical archaeology of the Holy Land. This book represents a fundamental paradigm shift brought about by the application of objective science-based dating methods, geographic information systems, anthropological models, and an array of computer-based and digital technology tools.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 352
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. November 2010
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 246mm x 175mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 839g
- ISBN-13: 9781845532581
- ISBN-10: 1845532589
- Artikelnr.: 23111601
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 352
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. November 2010
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 246mm x 175mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 839g
- ISBN-13: 9781845532581
- ISBN-10: 1845532589
- Artikelnr.: 23111601
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Thomas Evan Levy
INTO THE FUTURE - NEW TRENDS IN HISTORICAL BIBLICAL ARCHAEOLOGY 1. The New
Pragmatism: Integrating Anthropological, Digital, and Historical Biblical
Archaeologies Thomas E. Levy 2. Re-constructing Biblical archaeology:
Towards an integration of archaeology and the Bible Shlomo Bunimovitz and
Avraham Faust 3. Future Directions in the Study of Ethnicity in Ancient
Israel Avi Faust Bar Ilan University, Ramat Gan 4. Biblical Archaeology as
Social Action in Israel - Two Case Studies David Ilan Nelson Glueck School
of Biblical Archaeology, Hebrew Union College, Jerusalem 5. The Archaeology
of the Levant in North America: The Transformation of Biblical and
Syro-Palestinian Archaeology Aaron Burke University of California, Los
Angeles SOME APPLICATIONS 6. Biblical Archaeology and Egypt during the EB
III and EB IV: New connections Miroslav Barta Czech Institute of
Egyptology, Charles University, Prague 7. New Perspectives on Levantine
Mortuary Ritual: A Cognitive Interpretive Approach to the Archaeology of
Death Aaron Brody Bade Museum, Pacific School of Religion 8. Under the
Shadow of the Four-Room House: Biblical Archaeology Meets Household
Archaeology in Israel Assaf Yasur-Landau University of California, Santa
Cruz 9. The Philistines and their Material Culture in Context: Future
Directions of Historical Biblical Archaeology for the Study of Cultural
Transmission Ann Killebrew Penn State University 10. Judha, Masos and
Hayil: The Importance of Ethnohistory and Oral Traditions Eveline J. van
der Steen East Carolina University, North Carolina 11. Four Chronological
Anchors of the Low Chronology in Historical Biblical Archaeology: An
Appraisal Daniel A. Frese*, Thomas E. Levy*, and Thomas Higham# *University
of California, San Diego and #University of Oxford FROM TEXT TO TURF 12.
Texts in Exile: Towards an Anthropological Methodology for Incorporating
Texts and Archaeology Tara Carter and Thomas E. Levy University of
California, San Diego 13. Excavating the Text of 1 Kings 9 - the Gates of
SolomonA". William Schniedewind University of California, Los Angeles 14.
Culture, Memory, and History: Reflections on Method in Biblical Studies.
Ronald Hendel University of California, Berkeley 15. Archaeology, the Bible
and History The Fall of the House of Omri - and the Origins of the
Israelite State Baruch Halpern Penn State University 16. Integrating
Archaeology and Texts: The Example of the Qumran Toilet Jodi Magness
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill IN PERSPECTIVE 17. Stones, bones,
texts and relevance: Or how I lost my fear of biblical archaeology and
started enjoying it Aren Maeir Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan 18. A Bible
Scholar in the City of David Richard Elliott Friedman University of
Georgia, Athens 19. Books and Stones and Ancient Jewish History: A View
from Camp David. David Goodblatt University of California, San Diego 20.
The Archaeology of Palestine in the Post-Biblical Periods: the Intersection
of Text and Artifact Jodi Magness University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
21. The Changing Place of Biblical Archaeology, Exceptionalism or Normal
Science? Alexander H. Joffe New Rochelle, N.Y. 22. Does 'Biblical
Archaeology' Have a future? William G. Dever University of Arizona
(Emeritus)
Pragmatism: Integrating Anthropological, Digital, and Historical Biblical
Archaeologies Thomas E. Levy 2. Re-constructing Biblical archaeology:
Towards an integration of archaeology and the Bible Shlomo Bunimovitz and
Avraham Faust 3. Future Directions in the Study of Ethnicity in Ancient
Israel Avi Faust Bar Ilan University, Ramat Gan 4. Biblical Archaeology as
Social Action in Israel - Two Case Studies David Ilan Nelson Glueck School
of Biblical Archaeology, Hebrew Union College, Jerusalem 5. The Archaeology
of the Levant in North America: The Transformation of Biblical and
Syro-Palestinian Archaeology Aaron Burke University of California, Los
Angeles SOME APPLICATIONS 6. Biblical Archaeology and Egypt during the EB
III and EB IV: New connections Miroslav Barta Czech Institute of
Egyptology, Charles University, Prague 7. New Perspectives on Levantine
Mortuary Ritual: A Cognitive Interpretive Approach to the Archaeology of
Death Aaron Brody Bade Museum, Pacific School of Religion 8. Under the
Shadow of the Four-Room House: Biblical Archaeology Meets Household
Archaeology in Israel Assaf Yasur-Landau University of California, Santa
Cruz 9. The Philistines and their Material Culture in Context: Future
Directions of Historical Biblical Archaeology for the Study of Cultural
Transmission Ann Killebrew Penn State University 10. Judha, Masos and
Hayil: The Importance of Ethnohistory and Oral Traditions Eveline J. van
der Steen East Carolina University, North Carolina 11. Four Chronological
Anchors of the Low Chronology in Historical Biblical Archaeology: An
Appraisal Daniel A. Frese*, Thomas E. Levy*, and Thomas Higham# *University
of California, San Diego and #University of Oxford FROM TEXT TO TURF 12.
Texts in Exile: Towards an Anthropological Methodology for Incorporating
Texts and Archaeology Tara Carter and Thomas E. Levy University of
California, San Diego 13. Excavating the Text of 1 Kings 9 - the Gates of
SolomonA". William Schniedewind University of California, Los Angeles 14.
Culture, Memory, and History: Reflections on Method in Biblical Studies.
Ronald Hendel University of California, Berkeley 15. Archaeology, the Bible
and History The Fall of the House of Omri - and the Origins of the
Israelite State Baruch Halpern Penn State University 16. Integrating
Archaeology and Texts: The Example of the Qumran Toilet Jodi Magness
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill IN PERSPECTIVE 17. Stones, bones,
texts and relevance: Or how I lost my fear of biblical archaeology and
started enjoying it Aren Maeir Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan 18. A Bible
Scholar in the City of David Richard Elliott Friedman University of
Georgia, Athens 19. Books and Stones and Ancient Jewish History: A View
from Camp David. David Goodblatt University of California, San Diego 20.
The Archaeology of Palestine in the Post-Biblical Periods: the Intersection
of Text and Artifact Jodi Magness University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
21. The Changing Place of Biblical Archaeology, Exceptionalism or Normal
Science? Alexander H. Joffe New Rochelle, N.Y. 22. Does 'Biblical
Archaeology' Have a future? William G. Dever University of Arizona
(Emeritus)
INTO THE FUTURE - NEW TRENDS IN HISTORICAL BIBLICAL ARCHAEOLOGY 1. The New
Pragmatism: Integrating Anthropological, Digital, and Historical Biblical
Archaeologies Thomas E. Levy 2. Re-constructing Biblical archaeology:
Towards an integration of archaeology and the Bible Shlomo Bunimovitz and
Avraham Faust 3. Future Directions in the Study of Ethnicity in Ancient
Israel Avi Faust Bar Ilan University, Ramat Gan 4. Biblical Archaeology as
Social Action in Israel - Two Case Studies David Ilan Nelson Glueck School
of Biblical Archaeology, Hebrew Union College, Jerusalem 5. The Archaeology
of the Levant in North America: The Transformation of Biblical and
Syro-Palestinian Archaeology Aaron Burke University of California, Los
Angeles SOME APPLICATIONS 6. Biblical Archaeology and Egypt during the EB
III and EB IV: New connections Miroslav Barta Czech Institute of
Egyptology, Charles University, Prague 7. New Perspectives on Levantine
Mortuary Ritual: A Cognitive Interpretive Approach to the Archaeology of
Death Aaron Brody Bade Museum, Pacific School of Religion 8. Under the
Shadow of the Four-Room House: Biblical Archaeology Meets Household
Archaeology in Israel Assaf Yasur-Landau University of California, Santa
Cruz 9. The Philistines and their Material Culture in Context: Future
Directions of Historical Biblical Archaeology for the Study of Cultural
Transmission Ann Killebrew Penn State University 10. Judha, Masos and
Hayil: The Importance of Ethnohistory and Oral Traditions Eveline J. van
der Steen East Carolina University, North Carolina 11. Four Chronological
Anchors of the Low Chronology in Historical Biblical Archaeology: An
Appraisal Daniel A. Frese*, Thomas E. Levy*, and Thomas Higham# *University
of California, San Diego and #University of Oxford FROM TEXT TO TURF 12.
Texts in Exile: Towards an Anthropological Methodology for Incorporating
Texts and Archaeology Tara Carter and Thomas E. Levy University of
California, San Diego 13. Excavating the Text of 1 Kings 9 - the Gates of
SolomonA". William Schniedewind University of California, Los Angeles 14.
Culture, Memory, and History: Reflections on Method in Biblical Studies.
Ronald Hendel University of California, Berkeley 15. Archaeology, the Bible
and History The Fall of the House of Omri - and the Origins of the
Israelite State Baruch Halpern Penn State University 16. Integrating
Archaeology and Texts: The Example of the Qumran Toilet Jodi Magness
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill IN PERSPECTIVE 17. Stones, bones,
texts and relevance: Or how I lost my fear of biblical archaeology and
started enjoying it Aren Maeir Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan 18. A Bible
Scholar in the City of David Richard Elliott Friedman University of
Georgia, Athens 19. Books and Stones and Ancient Jewish History: A View
from Camp David. David Goodblatt University of California, San Diego 20.
The Archaeology of Palestine in the Post-Biblical Periods: the Intersection
of Text and Artifact Jodi Magness University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
21. The Changing Place of Biblical Archaeology, Exceptionalism or Normal
Science? Alexander H. Joffe New Rochelle, N.Y. 22. Does 'Biblical
Archaeology' Have a future? William G. Dever University of Arizona
(Emeritus)
Pragmatism: Integrating Anthropological, Digital, and Historical Biblical
Archaeologies Thomas E. Levy 2. Re-constructing Biblical archaeology:
Towards an integration of archaeology and the Bible Shlomo Bunimovitz and
Avraham Faust 3. Future Directions in the Study of Ethnicity in Ancient
Israel Avi Faust Bar Ilan University, Ramat Gan 4. Biblical Archaeology as
Social Action in Israel - Two Case Studies David Ilan Nelson Glueck School
of Biblical Archaeology, Hebrew Union College, Jerusalem 5. The Archaeology
of the Levant in North America: The Transformation of Biblical and
Syro-Palestinian Archaeology Aaron Burke University of California, Los
Angeles SOME APPLICATIONS 6. Biblical Archaeology and Egypt during the EB
III and EB IV: New connections Miroslav Barta Czech Institute of
Egyptology, Charles University, Prague 7. New Perspectives on Levantine
Mortuary Ritual: A Cognitive Interpretive Approach to the Archaeology of
Death Aaron Brody Bade Museum, Pacific School of Religion 8. Under the
Shadow of the Four-Room House: Biblical Archaeology Meets Household
Archaeology in Israel Assaf Yasur-Landau University of California, Santa
Cruz 9. The Philistines and their Material Culture in Context: Future
Directions of Historical Biblical Archaeology for the Study of Cultural
Transmission Ann Killebrew Penn State University 10. Judha, Masos and
Hayil: The Importance of Ethnohistory and Oral Traditions Eveline J. van
der Steen East Carolina University, North Carolina 11. Four Chronological
Anchors of the Low Chronology in Historical Biblical Archaeology: An
Appraisal Daniel A. Frese*, Thomas E. Levy*, and Thomas Higham# *University
of California, San Diego and #University of Oxford FROM TEXT TO TURF 12.
Texts in Exile: Towards an Anthropological Methodology for Incorporating
Texts and Archaeology Tara Carter and Thomas E. Levy University of
California, San Diego 13. Excavating the Text of 1 Kings 9 - the Gates of
SolomonA". William Schniedewind University of California, Los Angeles 14.
Culture, Memory, and History: Reflections on Method in Biblical Studies.
Ronald Hendel University of California, Berkeley 15. Archaeology, the Bible
and History The Fall of the House of Omri - and the Origins of the
Israelite State Baruch Halpern Penn State University 16. Integrating
Archaeology and Texts: The Example of the Qumran Toilet Jodi Magness
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill IN PERSPECTIVE 17. Stones, bones,
texts and relevance: Or how I lost my fear of biblical archaeology and
started enjoying it Aren Maeir Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan 18. A Bible
Scholar in the City of David Richard Elliott Friedman University of
Georgia, Athens 19. Books and Stones and Ancient Jewish History: A View
from Camp David. David Goodblatt University of California, San Diego 20.
The Archaeology of Palestine in the Post-Biblical Periods: the Intersection
of Text and Artifact Jodi Magness University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
21. The Changing Place of Biblical Archaeology, Exceptionalism or Normal
Science? Alexander H. Joffe New Rochelle, N.Y. 22. Does 'Biblical
Archaeology' Have a future? William G. Dever University of Arizona
(Emeritus)