Knappett
Network Analys Archaeology C
Knappett
Network Analys Archaeology C
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This volume provides a coherent framework on network analysis in current archaeological practice by pulling together its main themes and approaches to show how it is changing the way archaeologists face the key questions of regional interaction.
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This volume provides a coherent framework on network analysis in current archaeological practice by pulling together its main themes and approaches to show how it is changing the way archaeologists face the key questions of regional interaction.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 372
- Erscheinungstermin: 10. Juni 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 236mm x 163mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 780g
- ISBN-13: 9780199697090
- ISBN-10: 0199697094
- Artikelnr.: 36081095
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 372
- Erscheinungstermin: 10. Juni 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 236mm x 163mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 780g
- ISBN-13: 9780199697090
- ISBN-10: 0199697094
- Artikelnr.: 36081095
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Professor Carl Knappett teaches in the Department of Art at the University of Toronto, where he is Walter Graham/ Homer Thompson Professor of Aegean Prehistory. His previous books include An Archaeology of Interaction: Network Perspectives on Material Culture and Society (2011), Thinking Through Material Culture: An Interdisciplinary Perspective, and Material Agency: Towards a Non-Anthropocentric Approach, the latter coedited with Lambros Malafouris.
* Acknowledgements
* List of Figures
* List of Contributors
* Part I: Background
* 1: Introduction: why networks? Carl Knappett
* 2: John Edward Terrell: Social network analysis and the practice of
history
* 3: Leif Isaksen: 'O what a tangled web we weave' - towards a practice
that does not deceive
* Part II: Sites and Settlements
* 4: Søren Sindbæk: Broken links and black boxes: material affiliations
and contextual network synthesis in the Viking world
* 5: Jonathan B. Scholnick, Jessica L. Munson, and Martha J. Macri:
Positioning power in a multi-relational framework: a social network
analysis of Classic Maya political rhetoric
* 6: What makes a site important? Centrality, gateways and gravity
* 7: Koji Mizoguchi: Evolution of prestige good systems: an application
of network analysis to the transformation of communication systems
and their media
* Part III: Material Culture
* 8: Barbara J. Mills, John M. Roberts, Jeffery J. Clark, William R.
Haas Jr., Deborah Huntley, Matthew A. Peeples, Lewis Borck, Susan C.
Ryan, Meaghan Trowbridge and Ronald L. Breiger: The dynamics of
social networks in the Late Prehispanic U.S. Southwest
* 9: Emma Blake: Social networks, path dependence, and the rise of
ethnic groups in pre-Roman Italy
* 10: Anna Collar: Re-thinking Jewish ethnicity through social network
analysis
* 11: Fiona Coward: Grounding the net: social networks, material
culture and geography in the Epipalaeolithic and early Neolithic of
the Near East (~21-6,000 cal BCE)
* 12: S. Colby Phillips and Erik Gjesfjeld: Evaluating adaptive network
strategies with geochemical sourcing data: a case study from the
Kuril Islands
* 13: Angus Mol and Jimmy Mans: Old boy networks in the indigenous
Caribbean
* Part IV
* 14: Sander van der Leeuw: Archaeology, networks, information
processing, and beyond
* List of Figures
* List of Contributors
* Part I: Background
* 1: Introduction: why networks? Carl Knappett
* 2: John Edward Terrell: Social network analysis and the practice of
history
* 3: Leif Isaksen: 'O what a tangled web we weave' - towards a practice
that does not deceive
* Part II: Sites and Settlements
* 4: Søren Sindbæk: Broken links and black boxes: material affiliations
and contextual network synthesis in the Viking world
* 5: Jonathan B. Scholnick, Jessica L. Munson, and Martha J. Macri:
Positioning power in a multi-relational framework: a social network
analysis of Classic Maya political rhetoric
* 6: What makes a site important? Centrality, gateways and gravity
* 7: Koji Mizoguchi: Evolution of prestige good systems: an application
of network analysis to the transformation of communication systems
and their media
* Part III: Material Culture
* 8: Barbara J. Mills, John M. Roberts, Jeffery J. Clark, William R.
Haas Jr., Deborah Huntley, Matthew A. Peeples, Lewis Borck, Susan C.
Ryan, Meaghan Trowbridge and Ronald L. Breiger: The dynamics of
social networks in the Late Prehispanic U.S. Southwest
* 9: Emma Blake: Social networks, path dependence, and the rise of
ethnic groups in pre-Roman Italy
* 10: Anna Collar: Re-thinking Jewish ethnicity through social network
analysis
* 11: Fiona Coward: Grounding the net: social networks, material
culture and geography in the Epipalaeolithic and early Neolithic of
the Near East (~21-6,000 cal BCE)
* 12: S. Colby Phillips and Erik Gjesfjeld: Evaluating adaptive network
strategies with geochemical sourcing data: a case study from the
Kuril Islands
* 13: Angus Mol and Jimmy Mans: Old boy networks in the indigenous
Caribbean
* Part IV
* 14: Sander van der Leeuw: Archaeology, networks, information
processing, and beyond
* Acknowledgements
* List of Figures
* List of Contributors
* Part I: Background
* 1: Introduction: why networks? Carl Knappett
* 2: John Edward Terrell: Social network analysis and the practice of
history
* 3: Leif Isaksen: 'O what a tangled web we weave' - towards a practice
that does not deceive
* Part II: Sites and Settlements
* 4: Søren Sindbæk: Broken links and black boxes: material affiliations
and contextual network synthesis in the Viking world
* 5: Jonathan B. Scholnick, Jessica L. Munson, and Martha J. Macri:
Positioning power in a multi-relational framework: a social network
analysis of Classic Maya political rhetoric
* 6: What makes a site important? Centrality, gateways and gravity
* 7: Koji Mizoguchi: Evolution of prestige good systems: an application
of network analysis to the transformation of communication systems
and their media
* Part III: Material Culture
* 8: Barbara J. Mills, John M. Roberts, Jeffery J. Clark, William R.
Haas Jr., Deborah Huntley, Matthew A. Peeples, Lewis Borck, Susan C.
Ryan, Meaghan Trowbridge and Ronald L. Breiger: The dynamics of
social networks in the Late Prehispanic U.S. Southwest
* 9: Emma Blake: Social networks, path dependence, and the rise of
ethnic groups in pre-Roman Italy
* 10: Anna Collar: Re-thinking Jewish ethnicity through social network
analysis
* 11: Fiona Coward: Grounding the net: social networks, material
culture and geography in the Epipalaeolithic and early Neolithic of
the Near East (~21-6,000 cal BCE)
* 12: S. Colby Phillips and Erik Gjesfjeld: Evaluating adaptive network
strategies with geochemical sourcing data: a case study from the
Kuril Islands
* 13: Angus Mol and Jimmy Mans: Old boy networks in the indigenous
Caribbean
* Part IV
* 14: Sander van der Leeuw: Archaeology, networks, information
processing, and beyond
* List of Figures
* List of Contributors
* Part I: Background
* 1: Introduction: why networks? Carl Knappett
* 2: John Edward Terrell: Social network analysis and the practice of
history
* 3: Leif Isaksen: 'O what a tangled web we weave' - towards a practice
that does not deceive
* Part II: Sites and Settlements
* 4: Søren Sindbæk: Broken links and black boxes: material affiliations
and contextual network synthesis in the Viking world
* 5: Jonathan B. Scholnick, Jessica L. Munson, and Martha J. Macri:
Positioning power in a multi-relational framework: a social network
analysis of Classic Maya political rhetoric
* 6: What makes a site important? Centrality, gateways and gravity
* 7: Koji Mizoguchi: Evolution of prestige good systems: an application
of network analysis to the transformation of communication systems
and their media
* Part III: Material Culture
* 8: Barbara J. Mills, John M. Roberts, Jeffery J. Clark, William R.
Haas Jr., Deborah Huntley, Matthew A. Peeples, Lewis Borck, Susan C.
Ryan, Meaghan Trowbridge and Ronald L. Breiger: The dynamics of
social networks in the Late Prehispanic U.S. Southwest
* 9: Emma Blake: Social networks, path dependence, and the rise of
ethnic groups in pre-Roman Italy
* 10: Anna Collar: Re-thinking Jewish ethnicity through social network
analysis
* 11: Fiona Coward: Grounding the net: social networks, material
culture and geography in the Epipalaeolithic and early Neolithic of
the Near East (~21-6,000 cal BCE)
* 12: S. Colby Phillips and Erik Gjesfjeld: Evaluating adaptive network
strategies with geochemical sourcing data: a case study from the
Kuril Islands
* 13: Angus Mol and Jimmy Mans: Old boy networks in the indigenous
Caribbean
* Part IV
* 14: Sander van der Leeuw: Archaeology, networks, information
processing, and beyond