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Material Agency : Towards a Non-Anthropocentric Approach / edited by Lambros Malafouris, Carl Knappett.

Por: Colaborador(es): Tipo de material: TextoTextoEditor: Boston, MA : Springer US, 2008Descripción: recurso en líneaTipo de contenido:
  • texto
Tipo de medio:
  • computadora
Tipo de portador:
  • recurso en línea
ISBN:
  • 9780387747118
Formatos físicos adicionales: Edición impresa:: Sin títuloClasificación LoC:
  • CC1-960
Recursos en línea:
Contenidos:
Where Brain, Body and World Collide -- At the Potter’s Wheel : An Argument for Material Agency -- Material Agency, Skills and History: Distributed Cognition and the Archaeology of Memory -- The Actor-Enacted: Cumbrian Sheep in 2001 -- Non-Human Agencies: Trees in Place and Time -- Intelligent Artefacts at Home in the 21st Century -- In Context: Meaning, Materiality and Agency in the Process of Archaeological Recording -- The Neglected Networks of Material Agency: Artefacts, Pictures and Texts -- Some Stimulating Solutions -- On Mediation and Material Agency in the Peircean Semeiotic -- When ANT meets SPIDER: Social theory for arthropods -- Agency, Networks, Past and Future.
Resumen: Agency is a key theme that cross-cuts a wide raft of disciplines in the humanities, social sciences and beyond; yet it is invariably discussed separately behind closed disciplinary doors. Within archaeology, agency has been characterized as a uniquely human attribute, and a means of incorporating individual intentionality into theoretical discourse. In other domains, however, notions of non-human and ‘material’ agency have been finding currency, and it is our aim to introduce some of these themes into archaeology and develop a non-anthropocentric approach to agency. It is anticipated that such a perspective will not only help us achieve more convincing interpretations of the past, giving a more active role to material culture, but also throw new light on the changing role of artifacts in the present and the future. This book is a groundbreaking attempt to address questions of non-human and material agency from a wide range of perspectives and disciplines: archaeology, anthropology, sociology, cognitive science, philosophy, and economics. The editors and authors demostrate that a distributed, relational approach to agency, incorporating both humans and artifacts, has important ramifications for how we understand material culture.
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Springer eBooks

Where Brain, Body and World Collide -- At the Potter’s Wheel : An Argument for Material Agency -- Material Agency, Skills and History: Distributed Cognition and the Archaeology of Memory -- The Actor-Enacted: Cumbrian Sheep in 2001 -- Non-Human Agencies: Trees in Place and Time -- Intelligent Artefacts at Home in the 21st Century -- In Context: Meaning, Materiality and Agency in the Process of Archaeological Recording -- The Neglected Networks of Material Agency: Artefacts, Pictures and Texts -- Some Stimulating Solutions -- On Mediation and Material Agency in the Peircean Semeiotic -- When ANT meets SPIDER: Social theory for arthropods -- Agency, Networks, Past and Future.

Agency is a key theme that cross-cuts a wide raft of disciplines in the humanities, social sciences and beyond; yet it is invariably discussed separately behind closed disciplinary doors. Within archaeology, agency has been characterized as a uniquely human attribute, and a means of incorporating individual intentionality into theoretical discourse. In other domains, however, notions of non-human and ‘material’ agency have been finding currency, and it is our aim to introduce some of these themes into archaeology and develop a non-anthropocentric approach to agency. It is anticipated that such a perspective will not only help us achieve more convincing interpretations of the past, giving a more active role to material culture, but also throw new light on the changing role of artifacts in the present and the future. This book is a groundbreaking attempt to address questions of non-human and material agency from a wide range of perspectives and disciplines: archaeology, anthropology, sociology, cognitive science, philosophy, and economics. The editors and authors demostrate that a distributed, relational approach to agency, incorporating both humans and artifacts, has important ramifications for how we understand material culture.

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