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Ages and Abilities: The Stages of Childhood and their Social Recognition in Prehistoric Europe and Beyond [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 264 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 250x176x14 mm, kaal: 1200 g
  • Sari: Childhood in the Past Monograph Series
  • Ilmumisaeg: 08-Oct-2020
  • Kirjastus: Access Archaeology
  • ISBN-10: 1789697689
  • ISBN-13: 9781789697681
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 264 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 250x176x14 mm, kaal: 1200 g
  • Sari: Childhood in the Past Monograph Series
  • Ilmumisaeg: 08-Oct-2020
  • Kirjastus: Access Archaeology
  • ISBN-10: 1789697689
  • ISBN-13: 9781789697681
Ages and Abilities explores social responses to childhood stages from the late Neolithic to Classical Antiquity in Central Europe and the Mediterranean and includes cross-cultural comparison to expand the theoretical and methodological framework. By comparing osteological and archaeological evidence, as well as integrating images and texts, the authors consider whether childhood age classes are archaeologically recognizable, at which approximated ages transitions took place, whether they are gradual or abrupt and different for girls and boys. Age transitions may be marked by celebrations and rituals; cultural accentuation of developmental stages may be reflected by inclusion or exclusion at cemeteries, by objects associated with childhood such as feeding vessels and toys, and gradual access to adult material culture. Access to tools, weapons and status symbols, as well as children&;s agency, rank and social status, are recurrent themes. The volume accounts for the variability in how a range of chronologically and geographically diverse communities perceived children and childhood, and at the same time, discloses universal trends in child development in the (pre-)historic past.

Ages and Abilities explores social responses to childhood stages from the late Neolithic to Classical Antiquity in Central Europe and the Mediterranean and includes cross-cultural comparison to expand the theoretical and methodological framework.

Arvustused

'...the volume fills a gap in the childhood archaeology literature and gives new archaeological perspectives on children's social status, a topic that remains understudied.' -- Melie Le Roy * Current World Archaeology *

List of contributors
iii
Childhood in the Past Monograph Series xi
Chapter 1 Katharina Rebay-Salisbury and Doris Pany-Kucera: Introduction. Children's developmental stages from biological, anthropological and archaeological perspectives
1(10)
Chapter 2 Kathryn A. Kamp and John C. Whittaker: Weaponry and children: technological and social trajectories
11(15)
Chapter 3 Ekaterina Alexandrova Stamboliyska-Petrova: How and when life is considered to have begun in past societies: child burials at the cemetery of Durankulak, north-east Bulgaria
26(8)
Chapter 4 Daniela Kern: Inherited rank and own abilities: children in Corded Ware and Bell Beaker communities of the Traisen Valley, Lower Austria
34(16)
Chapter 5 Lucie Velova, Katarina Hladikova and Klaudia Danova: The little ones in the Early Bronze Age: foetuses, newborns and infants in the Unetice Culture in Bohemia, Moravia and Slovakia
50(19)
Chapter 6 Katharina Rebay-Salisbury, with contributions by Patrik Galeta, Walther Parson, Doris Pany-Kucera, Michaela Spannagl-Steiner and Christina Strobl: Ages and life stages at the Middle Bronze Age cemetery of Pitten, Lower Austria
69(15)
Chapter 7 Eszter Melis, Tamas Hajdu, Kitti Kohler and Viktoria Kiss: Children in the territory of Western Hungary during the Early and Middle Bronze Age: the recognition of developmental stages in the past
84(23)
Chapter 8 Daria Loznjak Dizdar and Petra Rajic Sikanjic: Childhood in the Late Bronze and Early Iron Age in the southern Carpathian Basin
107(15)
Chapter 9 Beata Kaczmarek: Mycenaean childhood: Linear B script set against archaeological artefacts
122(11)
Chapter 10 Nadia Pezzulla: Dumu.gaba, sihru e Gurus/sal.Tur.tur
133(18)
Chapter 11 Francesca Fulminante: Identifying social and cultural thresholds in sub-adult burials
151(23)
Chapter 12 Elisa Perego, Veronica Tamorri and Rafael Scopacasa: Child personhood in Iron Age Veneto: insights from micro-scale contextual analysis and burial taphonomy
174(19)
Chapter 13 Anna Serra: The recognition of children and child-specific burial practices at the necropolis of Spina, Italy
193(16)
Chapter 14 Hanna Amman Greek children and their wheel carts on Attic Vases
209(12)
Chapter 15 Alexandra Syrogianni: Teeny-tiny little coffins: from the embrace of the mother to the embrace of Hades in ancient Greek society
221(14)
Chapter 16 Irene Manas Romero and Jose Nicolas Saiz Lopez: Pueri nascentes: rituals, birth and social recognition in Ancient Rome
235
Katharina Rebay-Salisbury is an archaeologist with a research focus on the European Bronze and Iron Ages. She directs the research group Prehistoric Identities at the Institute for Oriental and European Archaeology of the Austrian Academy of Sciences and teaches at the University of Vienna. ;





Doris Pany-Kucera studied biological anthropology at the University of Vienna, focusing on muscle marks and joint changes on skeletal remains to reconstruct occupational stress and labour patterns (PhD 2015). She teaches at the Universities of Vienna and Pilsen.