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Anthropological Perspectives on Technology (First edition)

Part of the Amerind Foundation New World studies series ; number 5 series
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These fourteen original essays accept a dual premise: technology pervades and is embedded in all human activities.

By taking that approach, studies of technology address two questions central in anthropological and archaeological research today-accounting for variability and change.

These diverse yet interrelated chapters show that to understand human lives, researchers must deal with the material world that all peoples create and inhabit.

Therefore an anthropology of technology is not a separate, discrete inquiry; instead, it is a way to connect how people make and use things to any activity studied, ranging from religion, to enculturation, to communication, to art. Each contributor discusses theories and methods and also offers a substantial case study.

These detailed inquiries span human societies from the Paleolithic to the computer age.

By moving beyond the usual approach of examining ancient technologies, particularly chipped stone and low-fired ceramics, this volume probes for the construction of meaning in the material world across millennia.

The authors of these essays find technology to be an inclusive and flexible topic that merges with studies of everything else in human activity.

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£38.95
Product Details
0826350399 / 9780826350398
Paperback / softback
306.46
30/12/2010
United States
English
xiv, 242 pages : illustrations (black and white), maps (black and white)
28 cm
Reprint. Originally published: 2001.