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Dominik Hagmann deposited Modeling Roman Rural Landscapes in the group
Late Antiquity on Humanities Commons 8 years, 3 months agoThe Department of Classical Archeology at the University of Vienna is currently investigating settlement processes and material culture in rural areas of the Roman province of Noricum by means of noninvasive survey methods. The aim is to create a new and widely accessible digital data base for different, tangible forms of rural settlement…[Read more]
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Dominik Hagmann deposited Modeling Roman Rural Landscapes in the group
Late Antiquity on Humanities Commons 8 years, 3 months agoThe Department of Classical Archeology at the University of Vienna is currently investigating settlement processes and material culture in rural areas of the Roman province of Noricum by means of noninvasive survey methods. The aim is to create a new and widely accessible digital data base for different, tangible forms of rural settlement…[Read more]
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Ilana Gershon deposited Knowing adoption and adopting knowledge in the group
Anthropology on Humanities Commons 8 years, 3 months agoIn the 1960s, the descent versus alliance debate dominated kinship studies-anthropologists wanted to determine
what relationship offered the best analytic lens for understanding how social groups were formed.
Those who favored descent felt that the most relevant question to ask was how groups constituted and reconstituted
themselves across…[Read more] -
Dominik Hagmann deposited Modeling Roman Rural Landscapes in the group
Late Antiquity on Humanities Commons 8 years, 3 months agoThe Department of Classical Archeology at the University of Vienna is currently investigating settlement processes and material culture in rural areas of the Roman province of Noricum by means of noninvasive survey methods. The aim is to create a new and widely accessible digital data base for different, tangible forms of rural settlement…[Read more]
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Dominik Hagmann deposited Modeling Roman Rural Landscapes in the group
Archaeology on Humanities Commons 8 years, 3 months agoThe Department of Classical Archeology at the University of Vienna is currently investigating settlement processes and material culture in rural areas of the Roman province of Noricum by means of noninvasive survey methods. The aim is to create a new and widely accessible digital data base for different, tangible forms of rural settlement…[Read more]
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Dominik Hagmann deposited Modeling Roman Rural Landscapes in the group
Archaeology on Humanities Commons 8 years, 3 months agoThe Department of Classical Archeology at the University of Vienna is currently investigating settlement processes and material culture in rural areas of the Roman province of Noricum by means of noninvasive survey methods. The aim is to create a new and widely accessible digital data base for different, tangible forms of rural settlement…[Read more]
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Dominik Hagmann deposited Modeling Roman Rural Landscapes in the group
Archaeology on Humanities Commons 8 years, 3 months agoThe Department of Classical Archeology at the University of Vienna is currently investigating settlement processes and material culture in rural areas of the Roman province of Noricum by means of noninvasive survey methods. The aim is to create a new and widely accessible digital data base for different, tangible forms of rural settlement…[Read more]
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Charlie Harper deposited Laboring with the Economics of Mycenaean Architecture: Theories, Methods, and Explorations of Mycenaean Architectural Production. in the group
Archaeology on Humanities Commons 8 years, 3 months agoThis study examines the connection between architecture and economy in Mycenaean Greece; it is a deep investigation of economic theory and models of the Mycenaean economy, existing methods for the study of prehistoric architecture, and particular Mycenaean structures. Over the course of the study, I present current thinking on the Mycenaean…[Read more]
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Charlie Harper deposited Laboring with the Economics of Mycenaean Architecture: Theories, Methods, and Explorations of Mycenaean Architectural Production. in the group
Archaeology on Humanities Commons 8 years, 3 months agoThis study examines the connection between architecture and economy in Mycenaean Greece; it is a deep investigation of economic theory and models of the Mycenaean economy, existing methods for the study of prehistoric architecture, and particular Mycenaean structures. Over the course of the study, I present current thinking on the Mycenaean…[Read more]
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Ilana Gershon deposited Selling Your Self in the United States in the group
Anthropology on Humanities Commons 8 years, 3 months agoIn the contemporary U.S. workplace, corporate personhood is increasingly becoming
the metaphor structuring how job seekers are supposed to present themselves as
employable. If one takes oneself to be a business, one should also take oneself to
be an entity that requires a brand. Some ethnographic questions arise when job
seekers try to embody…[Read more] -
Ilana Gershon deposited Media Ideologies: An Introduction in the group
Anthropology on Humanities Commons 8 years, 3 months agoThis volume began with the question: what analytical possibilities can scholarly
work on language ideologies offer the study of media? Studying media ideologies
is not new, but calling the metalanguage that emphasizes the technology or bodies
through which we communicate a “media ideology” is. By examining media ideologies,
the authors in thi…[Read more] -
Kirsty Millican deposited Contextualising the cropmark record: the timber monuments of the Neolithic of Scotland. Volume 2: Gazetteer in the group
Archaeology on Humanities Commons 8 years, 3 months agoPhD Thesis. Volume 2; Gazetteer
Monuments of stone, earth and wood were built for the first time at the beginning of the Neolithic period in Scotland (4000 BC). While archaeological attention and investigation has focused upon monuments of stone and earth, those of timber have generally received much less attention and remain to be fully accepted…[Read more] -
Kirsty Millican deposited Contextualising the cropmark record: the timber monuments of the Neolithic of Scotland. Volume 1: Text in the group
Archaeology on Humanities Commons 8 years, 3 months agoMonuments of stone, earth and wood were built for the first time at the beginning of the Neolithic period in Scotland (4000 BC). While archaeological attention and investigation has focused upon monuments of stone and earth, those of timber have generally received much less attention and remain to be fully accepted and integrated into wider…[Read more]
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Kirsty Millican deposited The Outside Inside: Combining Aerial Photographs, Cropmarks and Landscape Experience in the group
Archaeology on Humanities Commons 8 years, 3 months agoThis paper seeks to make a contribution to current debates concerning the dislocation in landscape research between experiential approaches and quantitative techniques of landscape analysis. It focuses upon a group of archaeological sites that are caught in the centre of this divide: plough-levelled sites recorded as cropmarks on aerial…[Read more]
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Kirsty Millican deposited Timber Monuments, Landscape and the Environment in the Nith Valley, Dumfries and Galloway in the group
Archaeology on Humanities Commons 8 years, 3 months agoThis paper considers the impact of landscape and environment upon monuments built during the Neolithic period. Taking a group of timber monuments of Neolithic date in the Nith Valley region, Dumfries and Galloway, it examines their relationship to the topography and environment and seeks to explain their uniquely linear nature, a feature of timber…[Read more]
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Kirsty Millican deposited Timber Monuments, Landscape and the Environment in the Nith Valley, Dumfries and Galloway in the group
Archaeology on Humanities Commons 8 years, 3 months agoThis paper considers the impact of landscape and environment upon monuments built during the Neolithic period. Taking a group of timber monuments of Neolithic date in the Nith Valley region, Dumfries and Galloway, it examines their relationship to the topography and environment and seeks to explain their uniquely linear nature, a feature of timber…[Read more]
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Kirsty Millican deposited Turning in circles: a new assessment of the Neolithic timber circles of Scotland in the group
Archaeology on Humanities Commons 8 years, 3 months agoThe large and growing number of timber circles recorded in Scotland as cropmarks on aerial photographs testifies to the important part they must have played in the later Neolithic monumental repertoire. However, this record of plough-levelled sites remains poorly understood, partly due to the problems involved in the interpretation of timber…[Read more]
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Gregor M. Schwarb deposited ‹al-istiṭāʿa› between kalām and falsafa in the group
Late Antiquity on Humanities Commons 8 years, 3 months agoSurveys the Begriffsgeschichte of istiṭāʿah (< τὸ αὐτεξούσιον; τὸ ἐφ´ ἡμῖν) in antique and late antique philosophical and theological/patristic texts, the Syriac&Arabic reception history of the Nicomachean Ethics, Alexander of Aphrodisias's Maqāla fī l-istiṭāʿa, Nemesius of Emesa's K. Ṭabīʿat al-insān, and early Christian-Arabic literature, and…[Read more]
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Gregor M. Schwarb deposited Theories of will and action in late antique Christian thought and early Muslim kalām: On the Arabic translation(s) of Nemesius of Emesa’s Περὶ φύσεως ἀνθρώπου and related texts in the group
Late Antiquity on Humanities Commons 8 years, 3 months agoDiscusses the Graeco-Syriac-Arabic transmission of Nemesius of Emesa’s Περὶ φύσεως ἀνθρώπου and related texts. The focus is on the notions of istiṭāʿah (τὸ αὐτεξούσιον; τὸ ἐφ´ ἡμῖν), irāda, qaṣd and ikhtiyār (προαίρεσις) in philosophical theories of action, the reception history of the Nicomachean Ethics, and their historical and conceptual relati…[Read more]
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Kirsty Millican deposited Turning in circles: a new assessment of the Neolithic timber circles of Scotland in the group
Archaeology on Humanities Commons 8 years, 3 months agoThe large and growing number of timber circles recorded in Scotland as cropmarks on aerial photographs testifies to the important part they must have played in the later Neolithic monumental repertoire. However, this record of plough-levelled sites remains poorly understood, partly due to the problems involved in the interpretation of timber…[Read more]
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