2023-11-01 Opovo Resurexit: Archaeological Projects have Life-Histories Too (Ruth Tringham)

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  • Опубликовано: 17 окт 2024
  • Opovo Resurrexit: Archaeological Projects have Life-Histories Too (Ruth Tringham, UC Berkeley)
    An exploration of Opovo Ugar-Bajbuk (in present-day Serbia) as a place that has been the focus of lives, events and projects during the 5th millennium BC and in the 20th and 21st centuries CE.
    REFERENCES:
    Slide 3:
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    Whittle, A., Bayliss, A., et al (2017). A Vinca potscape: formal chronological models for the use and development of Vinča ceramics in south-east Europe Documenta Praehistorica 43
    Slide 4:
    Tringham, R. (2022). On the Digital and Analog Afterlives of Archaeological Projects. In K. Garstki (Ed.), Critical Archaeology in the Digital Age (pp. 185-200). Cotsen Institute of Archaeology Press
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    Tringham, R. (2023). Acknowledging Inspirations in a Lifetime of Shifting and Pivoting Standpoints to Construct the Past [Perspective]. Annual Reviews of Anthropology, 52. doi.org/https:...
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    Tringham, R., Cooper, G., Odell, G., Voytek, B., & Whitman, A. (1974). Experimentation in the formation of edge-damage: a new approach to lithic analysis. Journal of Field Archaeology, 1(1-2), 186-196.
    Slide 7:
    Tringham, R. (1978). Experimentation, Ethnoarchaeology and the Leapfrogs in Archaeological Methodology. In R. Gould (Ed.), Explorations in Ethnoarchaeology (pp. 169-199). University of New Mexico Press.
    Slide 15:
    Stevanovic, M. (1997). The Age of Clay: The Social Dynamics of House Destruction. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology, 16, 334-395.
    Slide 16:
    Tringham, R., Brukner, B., Kaiser, T., Borojevic, K., Russell, N., Steli, P., Stevanovic, M., & Voytek, B. (1992). The Opovo Project: a study of socio-economic change in the Balkan Neolithic. 2nd preliminary report. Journal of Field Archaeology, 19(3), 351-386.
    Tringham, R., Brukner, B., & Voytek, B. (1985). The Opovo Project: a study of socio-economic change in the Balkan Neolithic. Journal of Field Archaeology, 12(4), 425-444.
    Tringham, R. (2010). Forgetting and Remembering the Digital Experience and Digital Data. In D. Boric (Ed.), Archaeology and Memory (pp. 68-104). Oxbow Books.
    Tringham, R. (2012). Households through a Digital Lens. In B. Parker & C. Foster (Eds.), New Perspectives on Household Archaeology (pp. 81-120). Eisenbrauns Publishing.
    Slide 18:
    Tringham, R. (1991). Households with Faces: the challenge of gender in prehistoric architectural remains. In J. Gero & M. Conkey (Eds.), Engendering Archaeology: Women and Prehistory: Women and Prehistory (pp. 93-131). Basil Blackwell.
    Slide 19:
    Joyce, R., & Tringham, R. (2007). Feminist Adventures in Hypertext. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory, 14(3: special issue: Practising Archaeology as a Feminist, edited by Alison Wylie and Meg Conkey), 328-358.
    Slide 20:
    Bailey, D., Tringham, R., Bass, J., Stevanovic, M., Hamilton, M., Neumann, H., Angelova, I., & Raduncheva, A. (1998). Expanding the Dimensions of Early Agricultural Tells: The Podgoritsa Archaeological Project, Bulgaria. Journal of Field Archaeology, 25(4), 373--396.
    Slide 22:
    Tringham, R., & Stevanovic, M. (Eds.). (2012). Last House on the Hill: BACH Area Reports from Çatalhöyük, Turkey (Çatalhöyük vol.11). Cotsen Institute of Archaeology Publications, UCLA.
    Slide 26:
    Tringham, R., & Danis, A. (2023). Forgotten Products of Labor: a Ritual of Many Lives. In H. Barnard (Ed.), Archaeology Outside the Box (pp. 206-215). Cotsen Institute of Archaeology Press, UCLA.
    Slide 28:
    Hofmann, R., Medović, A., Furholt, M., Medović, I., Pešterac, T. S., Dreibrodt, Stefan , Martini, S., & Hofmann, A. (2019). Late Neolithic multicomponent sites of the Tisza region and the emergence of centripetal settlement layouts. Praehistorische Zeitschrift, 94(Issue 2), 351-378.
    Hofmann, R., & Müller-Scheessel, N. (2020). Orientation of Neolithic Dwellings in Central and Southeast Europe: common denominator between the Vinca and Linearbandkeramik worlds. Quaternary International, 560-561, 142-153.

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