Archaeological Review from Cambridge
Issue 25.1, April 2010
Table of Contents
Theme Editors: Skylar Neil and Belinda Crerar
Introduction
Skylar Neil and Belinda Crerar
War and Peace: A Reassessment of the Archaeological Traces of Warfare, Inter-Personal Violence and Peace in the Material Record
Erik G. Johannesson and Michelle L. Machicek
Coalescence and Conflict in Iroquoian Ontario
Jennifer Birch
Staking a Claim: Fortified Homesteads and their Place in Australian Settler Identity Construction
Dr Nicolas K. Grguric
Conflict in the Highlands: The Archaeology of the Scottish Highland Clearances
Jarvis Hayman
'Defenders of the Polis': The Heroisation of War Dead in Classical Greece
Kirsten Bedigan
Battlefield Remains? The Interpretation of Weaponry in Bronze Age Egypt and the Levant
Dan Boatright
'A Road either to Safety or to Ruin': Violence and Conflict in Hunter-Gatherer Societies
Emma Elder
'Shot at Dawn': Manipulating Remembrance and Forgetting
Johnathon Trigg
Uncovering the Arsenals of Armageddon: The Historical Archaeology of North American Cold War Ballistic Missile Launch Sites
Todd A. Hanson
Book Reviews and Notes
Edited by Victoria Pia Spry-Marqués
Past Bodies: Body-Centred Research in Archaeology (edited by D. Borić and J. Robb) — Dr Hannah Cobb
Image and Audience: Rethinking Prehistoric Art (by Richard Bradley) — Mark Sapwell
Textile Production in Pre-Roman Italy (by M. Gleba) — Elizabeth M. Schech
American Megafaunal Extinctions at the End of the Pleistocene (edited by G. Haynes) — Alexander J. E. Pryor
Anglo-Saxon Deviant Burial Customs (Andrew Reynolds) — Christopher Ferguson
The Partings of the Sea: How Volcanoes, Earthquakes, and Plagues Shaped the Story of Exodus (by B. J. Sivertsen) — Rodrigo Pacheco Ruiz
A "Splendid Idiosyncrasy": Prehistory at Cambridge 1915 - 50 (by P. J. Smith) — Terra C. Pruitt
Espacio, Tiempo y Forma. Prehistoria y Arqueología. Homenaje al Profesor Eduardo Ripoll Perelló. Serie 1, No. 1. (by Several Authors) — Particia Murrieta-Flores
Translate
Este Blogue tem como objectivo a discussão da violência em geral e da guerra na Pré-História em particular. A Arqueologia da Península Ibérica tem aqui especial relevo. Esperamos cruzar dados de diferentes campos do conhecimento com destaque para a Antropologia Social. As críticas construtivas são bem vindas neste espaço, que se espera, de conhecimento.
Guerra Primitiva\Pré-Histórica
Violência interpessoal colectiva entre duas ou mais comunidades políticas distintas, com o uso de armas tendo como objectivo causar fatalidades, por um motivo colectivo sem hipótese de compensação.
Violência interpessoal colectiva entre duas ou mais comunidades políticas distintas, com o uso de armas tendo como objectivo causar fatalidades, por um motivo colectivo sem hipótese de compensação.
Thursday, 9 September 2010
Violence and Conflict in the Material Record
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