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Handbook of material culture / edited by Christopher Tilley, Webb Keane, Susanne Küchler, Michael Rowlands and Patricia Spyer.

Contributor(s): Tilley, Christopher Y [editor.] | Keane, Webb, 1955- [editor.] | Küchler, Susanne [editor.] | Rowlands, Michael [editor.] | Spyer, Patricia, 1957- [editor.]Publisher: Los Angeles : SAGE, 2013Description: xvii, 556 pages : illustrations (black and white), maps (black and white) ; 25 cmContent type: text | still image | cartographic image Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volume001: 43326ISBN: 9781446270561 (pbk.) :Subject(s): Material culture | SocietyDDC classification: 306.46 TIL LOC classification: GN406 | .H3 2013Summary: 'Handbook of Material Culture' provides a critical survey of the theories, concepts, intellectual debates, substantive domains and traditions of study characterizing the analysis of things.
Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book MAIN LIBRARY Book PRINT 306.46 TIL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 112953

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

The Handbook of Material Culture provides a critical survey of the theories, concepts, intellectual debates, substantive domains, and traditions of study characterizing the analysis of "things." This cutting-edge work examines the current state of material culture as well as how this field of study may be extended and developed in the future.

Originally published: 2006.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

'Handbook of Material Culture' provides a critical survey of the theories, concepts, intellectual debates, substantive domains and traditions of study characterizing the analysis of things.

Table of contents provided by Syndetics

  • List of illustrations and tables (p. vii)
  • Notes on contributors (p. xi)
  • Introduction (p. 1)
  • Part I Theoretical Perspectives: Introduction (p. 7)
  • 1 In the Matter of Marxism (p. 13)
  • 2 Structuralism and Semiotics (p. 29)
  • 3 Phenomenology and Material Culture (p. 43)
  • 4 Objectification (p. 60)
  • 5 Agency, Biography and Objects (p. 74)
  • 6 Scenes from a Troubled Engagement: Post-structuralism and Material Culture Studies (p. 85)
  • 7 Colonial Matters: Material Culture and Postcolonial s Theory in Colonial Situations (p. 104)
  • Part II The Body, Materiality and the Senses: Introduction (p. 125)
  • 8 Four Types of Visual Culture (p. 131)
  • 9 Food, Eating, and the Good Life (p. 145)
  • 10 Scent, Sound and Synaesthesia: Intersensoriality and Material Culture Theory (p. 161)
  • 11 The Colours of Things (p. 173)
  • 12 Inside and Outside: Surfaces and Containers (p. 186)
  • Part III Subjects and Objects: Introduction (p. 197)
  • 13 Cloth and Clothing (p. 203)
  • 14 Home Furnishing and Domestic Interiors (p. 221)
  • 15 Vernacular Architecture (p. 230)
  • 16 Architecture and Modernism (p. 254)
  • 17 'Primitivism', Anthropology, and the Category of 'Primitive art' (p. 267)
  • 18 Tracking Globalization: Commodities and Value in Motion (p. 285)
  • 19 Place and Landscape (p. 303)
  • 20 Cultural Memory (p. 315)
  • Part IV Process and Transformation: Introduction (p. 325)
  • 21 Technology as Material Culture (p. 329)
  • 22 Consumption (p. 341)
  • 23 Style, Design, and Function (p. 355)
  • 24 Exchange (p. 373)
  • 25 Performance (p. 384)
  • 26 Present to Past: Ethnoarchaeology (p. 402)
  • 27 Material Culture and Long-term Change (p. 425)
  • Part V Presentation and Politics: Introduction (p. 443)
  • 28 Intellectual Property and Rights: an Anthropological Perspective (p. 447)
  • 29 Heritage and the Present Past (p. 463)
  • 30 Museums and Museum Displays (p. 480)
  • 31 Monuments and Memorials (p. 500)
  • 32 Conservation as Material Culture (p. 516)
  • 33 Collectors and Collecting (p. 534)
  • Index (p. 546)

Reviews provided by Syndetics

CHOICE Review

While material culture remains an analytical element or field of study within a number of disciplines, 24 of this handbook's 36 contributors are anthropologists and 5 are archaeologists. The editors proclaim theirs as the "primary disciplinary ‘home' and point of origin" of material culture studies, and have built their handbook around home base. The contributors pay serious attention to older and newer theoretical perspectives from a wide variety of sources, including literary currents of the 1990s. They offer a series of snapshots that assess the virtues and deficits of these theories and provide, in effect, annotated bibliographies for the more interesting and important relevant applications that have been made of them. Chapters slice perspective in different ways. Some of the less-usual topics are scent and sound, cultural memory, technology, performance, and intellectual property. Occurring largely within the culture of contemporary anthropology, the discussions typically attempt to rise above European American and Western colonial prejudgments to find the subject in the object, to search for agency, to reduce the focus on materialism in material culture, and to emphasize basic continuity more than change over time. Architects, economists, and historians are largely welcome as visitors to this handbook. ^BSumming Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above. J. L. Cooper emeritus, DePauw University

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