Searching for Structure in Pottery Analysis: Applying Multiple Scales and Instruments to Production [Kõva köide]

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  • Formaat: Hardback, 218 pages, kõrgus x laius: 254x178 mm, kaal: 3400 g, 44 colour and black and white figures
  • Sari: New Directions in Anthropological Archaeology
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Aug-2022
  • Kirjastus: Equinox Publishing Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1781790531
  • ISBN-13: 9781781790533
  • Formaat: Hardback, 218 pages, kõrgus x laius: 254x178 mm, kaal: 3400 g, 44 colour and black and white figures
  • Sari: New Directions in Anthropological Archaeology
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Aug-2022
  • Kirjastus: Equinox Publishing Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1781790531
  • ISBN-13: 9781781790533
Searching for Structure in Pottery Analysis addresses the theoretical and methodological imperatives involved in (re)integrating descriptive, structural, and compositional analytical methods in a series of contributions from a diverse group of experts in archaeological pottery. Drawing on the life's work of materials scientist Cyril Stanley Smith (The Search For Structure, MIT Press, 1981), a pioneering materials scientist who brought an important focus on structure to studies of a variety of archaeological materials, the contributors focus on those forms of analysis which investigate structural characteristics of ceramics and the methodologies that link such structural characteristics with the typological and compositional data that compose the majority of evidence in contemporary ceramic analyses. The chapters include essays organized into two sections: the first focuses on how the practices of ceramic production and the structures they generate enable inferences about the social relations between producers and consumers of pottery; and the second focuses on the role structure plays in the refraction and maintenance of different forms of social grouping and identity. These two themes serve as orienting foci for a broad set of heuristic and technical tools that have the potential to alter how archaeologists extract and identify the social information captured in the multifarious properties of pottery and transform contemporary understandings of the different roles ceramics played in past societies.
Foreword
Heather Lechtman, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

1. The Structure of Ceramic Analysis: Multiple Scales and Instruments in the
Analysis of Production
Alan F. Greene and Charles W. Hartley

2. From Texture to Temper: A Multi-scalar Approach to Identifying Variation
in Clay Preparation Strategies
MaryFran Heinsch, University of Chicago

3. Producing Structure: The Role of Ceramic Production in Understanding
Chaco-period Communities in the American Southwest
Andrew I. Duff, Washington State University

4. Ceramic Production and Society in the Late Majiayao Culture of Northwest
China
Michele Koons, Denver Museum of Nature and Science, and Jade DAlpoim Guedes,
University of California, San Diego

5. From Structure to Composition and Back: Digital Radiography and Computed
Tomography; Some Cases for Anthropological Contemplation
Charles W. Hartley, Alan F. Greene, and Paula N. Doumani Dupuy, Nazarbayev
University

6. Coiling on the Wheel: The Sociopolitical Implications of a Particular
Formation Technique in Bronze Age Crete
Ina Berg, University of Manchester

7. (Ceramic) Structure and (Communities of) Practice in the Bronze Age Black
Sea
Alexander Bauer, Queens College, City University of New York

8. Laterality and Directionality in Pottery Painting and Coiling
Kathryn A. MacFarland, University of Arizona

9. What a Difference Structure Makes: Material Styles of Syrian Caliciform
Ware Identified through Ceramic Petrography
Sarah R. Graff, Arizona State University

10. X-ray Fluoroscopy in Your Own Backyard: A Method for Analyzing Ceramic
Formation Techniques
Erin N. Hegberg and Philip H. Heintz, both at University of New Mexico

11. Conclusion: A New Search for Structure
Alan F. Greene and Charles W. Hartley
Alan F. Greene is an affiliate researcher at New York University's Institute for the Study of the Ancient World. Charles W. Hartley completed his Ph.D. in anthropological archaeology at the University of Chicago in 2020. Charles is a codirector of the Making of Ancient Eurasia (MAE) project, an analytical collaboration between anthropologists and material scientists at Argonne National Laboratory.