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Prophet, Pariah, and Pioneer: Walter W. Taylor and Dissension in American Archaeology [Kõva köide]

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  • Formaat: Hardback, 488 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 235x159x33 mm, kaal: 773 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Feb-2010
  • Kirjastus: University Press of Colorado
  • ISBN-10: 0870819526
  • ISBN-13: 9780870819520
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 488 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 235x159x33 mm, kaal: 773 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Feb-2010
  • Kirjastus: University Press of Colorado
  • ISBN-10: 0870819526
  • ISBN-13: 9780870819520
Teised raamatud teemal:
"This is a fascinating book about a complex person...Taylor is claimed by the contributors to this new book as ancestor to both processual and postprocessual archaeologies...It thus remains possible to read him in different ways, as is well brought out by the diverse contributions to this volume, which is the first to provide a thorough and informed account that contextualizes Taylor's work and habilitates him within later and contemporary currents in archaeology...Throughout Prophet, Pariah, and Pioneer and especially at the end, the twists and turns, the refractions never stop...The editors are to be congratulated for not trying to tidy him up..." -Ian Hodder, Current Anthropology

In his 1948 work A Study of Archaeology, recently minted Harvard Ph.D. Walter W. Taylor delivered the strongest and most substantial critique of American archaeology ever published. He created many enemies with his dissection of the research programs of Americas leading scholars, who took it as a personal affront. Taylor subsequently saw his ideas co-opted, his research pushed to the margins, and his students punished. Publicly humiliated at the 1985 Society for American Archaeology meeting, he suffered ridicule until his death in 1997.

Nearly everyone in the archaeological community read Taylors book at the time, and despite the negative reaction, many were influenced by it. Few young scholars dared to directly engage and build on his conjunctive approach, yet his suggested methods nevertheless began to be adopted and countless present-day authors highlight his impact on the 1960s formation of the New Archaeology. In

Prophet, Pariah, and Pioneer, peers, colleagues, and former students offer a critical consideration of Taylors influence and legacy. Neither a festschrift nor a mere analysis of his work, the book presents an array of voices exploring Taylor and his influence, sociologically and intellectually, as well as the culture of American archaeology in the second half of the twentieth century.

Arvustused

"This is a fascinating book about a complex person...Taylor is claimed by the contributors to this new book as ancestor to both processual and postprocessual archaeologies...It thus remains possible to read him in different ways, as is well brought out by the diverse contributions to this volume, which is the first to provide a thorough and informed account that contextualizes Taylor's work and habilitates him within later and contemporary currents in archaeology...Throughout Prophet, Pariah, and Pioneer and especially at the end, the twists and turns, the refractions never stop...The editors are to be congratulated for not trying to tidy him up..." Ian Hodder, Current Anthropology ". . . one of the best things I have read in the history of archaeology for a long time. It demonstrates a level of disciplinary maturity in American archaeology where painful memories can be re-experienced and wrongs (on both sides) can be acknowledged." Archaeology Bulletin "This book is the fullest account of Walter Taylor yet in print, and doubtless it will remain so for many years. . . the focus of the volume on earlier theoretical history encourages us to more fully explore where we have been, where we are now, and where we may be going." American Antiquity

List of Contributors
xi
List of Figures and Tables
xiii
Foreword xv
Linda S. Cordell
Preface, Acknowledgments, and
Chapter Summaries
xxi
Allan L. Maca
Jonathan E. Reyman
William J. Folan
PART I INTRODUCTION, BACKGROUND, AND OVERVIEW
1 Then and Now: W. W. Taylor and American Archaeology
3(54)
Allan L. Maca
2 Walter Willard Taylor Jr.: A Biographical Sketch and Bibliography
57(16)
Jonathan E. Reyman
3 No Man Is an Island: The Scholarship of Walter W. Taylor
73(30)
Brenda V. Kennedy
PART II SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY: COLLEAGUES' PERSPECTIVES
4 Walter Taylor: POW, Professor, and Colleague
103(16)
Philip J. C. Dark
5 Professor Walter W. Taylor as Chairman
119(4)
J. Charles Kelley
6 Reflections on Walter Taylor
123(6)
Carroll L. Riley
PART III SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY: STUDENTS' PERSPECTIVES
7 Walter Taylor in the 1960s
129(12)
R. Berle Clay
8 Yanaconas
141(8)
James Schoenwetter
9 Walter W. Taylor: Prophet, Pariah, and Pioneer
149(20)
William J. Folan
10 Walter Taylor: A Stimulating and Problematic Professor
169(8)
Phil C. Weigand
11 Professor Walter W. Taylor
177(20)
Jonathan E. Reyman
PART IV ANALYSES OF TAYLOR'S WORK AND INFLUENCE
12 Remembering Walter Taylor
197(4)
William A. Longacre
13 Walter W. Taylor's A Study of Arch(a)eology: Its Impact, or Lack Thereof, 1943-Present
201(16)
Patty Jo Watson
14 Cornelius Osgood, Preceptor
217(10)
Alice Beck Kehoe
15 Walter W. Taylor and the Study of Maya Iconography
227(16)
Rosemary A. Joyce
16 Walter Taylor's Conjunctive Approach in Maya Archaeology
243(56)
Allan L. Maca
17 Walter W. Taylor in the Southwest
299(16)
Don D. Fowler
18 Walter Taylor and the Production of Anger in American Archaeology
315(18)
Mark P. Leone
PART V DISCUSSION
19 "Conjunctivitis": Notes on Historical Ethnography, Paradigms, and Social Networks in Academia
333(24)
Quetzil E. Castaneda
Epilogue 357(6)
References 363(44)
Index 407
Allan Maca is an assistant professor of anthropology at Colgate University.  William Folan is the director of the Center for Historical and Social Research at the Universidad Autónoma de Campeche in Mexico. Jonathan Reyman is curator of anthropology at the Illinios State Museum.