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Alicia Colson deposited Visiting Old Friends in the group
Archaeology on Humanities Commons 2 years, 1 month agoThis published by the publication ‘The Contingent’ https://contingentmagazine.org
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Alicia Colson deposited The Brown Bear and I: archeology, adventure and colonisation in the Canadian ‘wilderness’ in the group
Archaeology on Humanities Commons 2 years, 1 month agoIn this piece Alicia writes about archeology as adventure, in the context of a long history of colonial exploration and exploitation of Indigenous peoples in the Canadian ‘wilderness’. https://adventureuncovered.com/stories/the-brown-bear-and-i-archeology-adventure-and-colonisation-in-the-canadian-wilderness/
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Alicia Colson deposited NFTs, AI, Ethics, and Indigenous Peoples. in the group
Archaeology on Humanities Commons 2 years, 1 month agoThe article is published in the official Journal of The Institute of Science and Technology (ISSN 2040-1868)
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Alicia Colson deposited Do not make snap decisions about what you are seeing: how digital analysis of the images from the Canadian Shield highlights the difficulties in classifying shapes in the group
Archaeology on Humanities Commons 2 years, 1 month agoThe act of classification has the widest implications for scholarship. Whatever the format, it involves the totality of our being. The use of our eyes indicates that decisions about whatever it is that we observe have already been made. Yet the interaction between the mechanical act of seeing and the mind or memory has rarely been registered. An…[Read more]
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Alicia Colson deposited WHAT DO THESE SYMBOLS MEAN? A CRITICAL REVIEW OF THE IMAGES FOUND ON THE ROCKS OF THE CANADIAN SHIELD WITH SPECIFIC REFERENCE TO THE PICTOGRAPHS OF THE LAKE OF THE WOODS in the group
Archaeology on Humanities Commons 2 years, 1 month agoReview of the literature on pictograph sites in the Canadian Shield with specific reference to those found in the Lake of the Woods, in north-western Ontario, Canada.
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Alicia Colson deposited Shifting perspectives: method, media and the complex image in the group
Archaeology on Humanities Commons 2 years, 1 month agoThis article argues that the analysis of a threedimensional image demanded a three-dimensional approach. The authors realise that discussions of images and image processing inveterately conceptualise representation as being flat, static, and finite. The authors recognise the need for a fresh acuteness to three-dimensionality as a meaningful – a…[Read more]
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Alicia Colson deposited What is a Heritage River? in the group
Archaeology on Humanities Commons 2 years, 1 month agoEssay on the NiCHE-Canada website: https://niche-canada.org/2023/10/30/what-is-a-heritage-river/
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Alicia Colson deposited Review of Susan M. Kooiman. Ancient Pottery, Cuisine, and Society at the Northern Great Lakes. Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, 2021. Illustrations, tables. 240 pp. $34.99, e-book, ISBN 978-0-268-20147-0. in the group
Archaeology on Humanities Commons 2 years, 1 month agoBook review
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Alicia Colson deposited Identifying Stories: The Challenges of New Sites, New Images and Different Interpretations of the images found on Pictograph sites in Lake of the Woods, Central Canada. in the group
Archaeology on Humanities Commons 2 years, 1 month agoThis article discusses four pictograph sites in the Lake of the Woods where the images were interpreted by several Indigenous peoples.
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Tiago Queimada e Silva deposited Lectio praecursoria: The Good Noblemen Who Conquered the Kingdom: Islam, Historiography, and Aristocratic Legitimation in Late-Medieval Portugal in the group
History on Humanities Commons 2 years, 1 month agoThis text consists of the ‘lectio praecursoria’ given at the defense of my doctoral dissertation “The Good Noblemen Who Conquered the Kingdom: Islam, Historiography, and Aristocratic Legitimation in Late-Medieval Portugal”. This dissertation deals with aristocratic historiography and political legitimation in late-medieval Portugal (late…[Read more]
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Alexandre Roberts deposited Thinking about Chemistry in Byzantium and the Islamic World in the group
History on Humanities Commons 2 years, 1 month agoThis article investigates several discussions of “chemistry,” understood as an analysts’ category referring to theories and practices dealing with the structure and transformation of matter. By reading these texts (a treatise defending kīmiyāʾ by al-Fārābī, the famous passage from Ibn Sīnā’s Shifāʾ on transmutation, Ibn Taymiyyah’s fatwā…[Read more]
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Ian Willis deposited Camden Material and Colour Guide, a heritage building guide in the group
History on Humanities Commons 2 years, 1 month agoThis blog post gives an overview of the Camden Material and Colour Guide. The guide provides property owners of heritage buildings in the Camden Heritage Conservation Area with tips and hints on restoration and conservation of their houses. The guide provides colour schemes on building exteriors and interiors by housing styles between 1840 and…[Read more]
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Mark Beumer deposited From Mithras to Jesus. Ritual Dynamics of Christmas in the group
Ancient Greece & Rome on Humanities Commons 2 years, 1 month agoAt Christmas, Christians celebrate that Jesus was born on December 25 as the son of God andthe Virgin Mary. But this event is not unique. In this article, I show that the birth of Jesus hasseveral non-Christian predecessors, whereby various elements of the ritual dynamics have beenChristianized and implemented into the figure we know today as Jesus Christ.
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Alexandre Roberts deposited Thinking about Chemistry in Byzantium and the Islamic World in the group
History on Humanities Commons 2 years, 1 month agoThe term “alchemy,” born out of early modern professional polemics among chemists, is problematic as a historical category. The present article shifts away from asking what pre-modern alchemy “really” was, to asking how medieval scholars writing in Greek and Arabic thought about the practice of treating and combining naturally occurring substan…[Read more]
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Ian Willis deposited Celebrate Camden 93, a spring festival in the group
History on Humanities Commons 2 years, 1 month agoThis blog post is about a spring festival in Camden, NSW, called Celebrate Camden.
The brainchild of Vicki Sutherland from the Camden Chamber of Commerce, it aimed to promote Camden as a viable tourist and shopping destination.
The festival had mixed success and was held in 1994 and 1995, to be replaced by the Cowpastures Bicentennial. -
Ian Willis deposited The Memory Landscape of the Cowpastures in memorials, monuments and murals in the group
History on Humanities Commons 2 years, 1 month agoAll around the community in the Macarthur region are cultural artefacts that are representations of the settler-colonial narrative of the Cowpastures, which was variously a colonial frontier, a government reserve, and a formal region.
Today, the material culture of the Cowpastures is hidden in plain sight and appears to have been ‘forgotten’ by…[Read more] -
Ian Willis deposited Conclusion (preprint) in the group
History on Humanities Commons 2 years, 1 month agoThis is a preprint of the Conclusion to a book called A History of Camden Chinese Market Gardeners 1899-1993 edited by Ian Willis and others
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Ian Willis deposited Motherhood -built communities and the nation in the group
History on Humanities Commons 2 years, 1 month agoThis article briefly examines the ideology of motherhood in the small country town of Camden, NSW.
Around the turn of the century in 1900, a direct link was made between infant welfare, motherhood, patriotism and nationalism. Motherhood and mothering were expressed in terms of patriotism and a national priority. All were driven by European…[Read more] -
Ian Willis deposited Memorial plaque to Jennifer Eggins, a founder of local tourism in the group
History on Humanities Commons 2 years, 1 month agoThis blog post explores the story of a memorial plaque to Jennifer Eggins in Camden, NSW.
Outside John Oxley Cottage, Camden Visitor Information Centre at 46 Camden Valley Way Elderslie, is a memorial plaque with a story to tell of local identity, Jennifer Eggins, and her legacy that still echoes across the district. She was one of the founders…[Read more] -
James Louis Smith deposited “Too Much Loose Sand:” Narrating Coastal Erosion in Southeast Ireland in the group
History on Humanities Commons 2 years, 2 months agoComprised of soft glacial cliffs and sandy beaches, the southeastern coastline of Ireland is dominated by unconsolidated Quaternary-aged sediments with fewer rock exposures than Ireland’s other coasts. Facing Britain across a rough sea, County Wexford has been prone to incursions from both political and environmental forces throughout history. T…[Read more]
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