Archaeology and AnthropologyTitle

Features 2001 new titles and key backlist

www.cambridge.org 2001 Contents

Archaeology Highlights 1 Anthropology Highlights 20 Recent General Archaeology 2 Case Studies in Early Societies 6 Highlights Cambridge World Archaeology 6 New Studies in Archaeology 8 New Directions in Archaeology 10 Cambridge Manuals in Archaeology 11 Classical Archaeology 12 Archaeology of the Americas 15 European Archaeology 16 Asian and African Archaeology 18 ➤ See page 21 Also of Interest 19 Social and 21 Cambridge Studies in Social and Cultural Anthropology 26 ➤ See page 4 Publications of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 26 Cambridge Studies in Medical Anthropology 28 Lewis Henry Morgan Lectures 29 Themes in the Social Sciences 29 Linguistic Anthropology 29 Studies in the Social and Cultural Foundations of Language 29 ➤ See page 3 Sociology and Cultural Studies 32 Cambridge Cultural Social Studies 35 ➤ See page 22 Biological Anthropology 37 ➤ Cambridge Studies in Biological and See page 2 Evolutionary Anthropology 39 Also of Interest 40 Author and Title Index 42 Cambridge University Press Around the World 45

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Forthcoming Empires, the largest political systems of the ancient and early modern world, powerfully transformed the lives of people within and even beyond their frontiers in ways quite Empires different from other, non-imperial societies. Appearing in all parts of the globe, and in Edited by Susan E. Alcock many different epochs, empires invite comparative analysis – yet few attempts have been University of Michigan, Ann Arbor made to place imperial systems within such a framework. This book brings together studies Terence N. D’Altroy by distinguished scholars from diverse academic traditions, including anthropology, Columbia University, New York archaeology, history, and classics. The empires discussed include case studies from Central Kathleen D. Morrison and South America, the Mediterranean, Europe, the Near East, South East Asia, and China, University of Chicago and range in time from the first millennium BC to the early modern era. The book and Carla M. Sinopoli organizes these detailed studies into five thematic sections: sources, approaches and University of Michigan, Ann Arbor definitions; empires in a wider world; imperial integration and imperial subjects; imperial ideologies; and the afterlife of empires.

Contents: Preface Carla M. Sinopoli and Terence N. D’Altroy; Part I. Sources, Approaches, Definitions Kathleen D. Morrison: 1. The shadow empires: imperial state formation along the Chinese-Nomad frontier Thomas J. Barfield; 2. Written on water: designs and dynamics in the Portuguese Estado de India Sanjay Subrahmanyam; 3. The Wari empire of Middle Horizon Peru: the epistemological challenge of documenting an empire without documentary evidence Katharina Scheiber; 4. The Achaemenid Persian empire (c. 550–c. 330 BCE): continuities, adaptations, transformations Amelie Kuhrt; Part II. Empires in a Wider World Terence N. D’Altroy: 5. The Aztec Empire and the Mesoamerican world system Michael E. Smith; 6. On the edge of empire: form and substance in the Satavahana dynasty Carla M. Sinopoli; 7. Dynamics of imperial adjustment in Spanish America: ideology and social integration Kathleen Deagan; Part III. Imperial Integration and Imperial Subjects Carla M. Sinopoli: 8. Politics, resources, and blood in the Inka Empire Terence N. D’Altroy; 9. Egypt and Nubia Robert Morkot; 10. Coercion, resistance, and hierarchy: local processes and imperial strategies in the Vijayanagara Empire Kathleen D. Morrison; Part IV. Imperial Ideologies Susan E. Alcock and Kathleen D. Morrison: 11. Aztec hearts and minds: religion and the state in the Aztec empire Elizabeth M. Brunfiel; 12. Inventing empire in ancient Rome Greg Woolf; 13. The reconfiguration of memory in the eastern Roman empire Susan E. Alcock; 14. Cosmos, central authority, and communities in the early Chinese empire Robin Yates; Part V. The Afterlife of Empires Susan E. Alcock: 15. The fall of the Assyrian empire: ancient and modern interpretations Mario Liverani; 16. The Carolingian empire: Rome reborn? John Moreland; 17. Cuzco, another Rome? Sabine MacCormack.

2001 246 x 189 mm 550pp 9 line diagrams 29 half-tones 17 tables 1 graph 30 maps 0 521 77020 3 Hardback c. £60.00

Publication August 2001 Fieldwork in archaeology has been transformed over the past three decades. Drawing on a wealth of experience in excavating some of the most complex, deeply-stratified sites in New Textbook Britain, Steve Roskams describes the changes that have taken place in the theory and Excavation practice of excavation. He then provides a clear account of contemporary techniques, Steve Roskams covering pre-excavation reconnaissance and site evaluation, the preparations for full University of York excavation, the actual process of excavation, and the recording of photographic, spatial, stratigraphic and physical evidence. A final chapter discusses the future of excavation. This manual will be welcomed by the professional excavator, the academic researcher, students, and the interested amateur.

Contents: Introduction; 1. History of the development of techniques; 2. Excavation in theory; 3. Pre-excavation strategies; 4. Excavation in practice: background preparations; 5. Excavation in practice: preparations on site; 6. A structured approach to recording; 7. The photographic record; 8. The spatial record; 9. The stratigraphic record; 10. The descriptive record: deposits; 11. Non-deposit descriptions; 12. Excavating the stratigraphic unit; 13. Stratigraphic analysis; 14. Future prospects.

Cambridge Manuals in Archaeology 2001 247 x 174 mm 328pp 30 line diagrams 42 half-tones 0 521 35534 6 Hardback £47.50 0 521 79801 9 Paperback £17.95 Publication April 2001

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Contents: Foreword Lord Renfrew; Preface; New General Archaeology Introduction; 1. The archaeology of archaeology; 2. Old worlds and new, Hawaiki, Ancestral Polynesia New in Paperback 1500–1760; 3. Antiquarians and explorers, An Essay in Historical Anthropology Cambridge Illustrated History of 1760–1820; 4. Science and Romanticism, Patrick Vinton Kirch Archaeology 1820–1860; 5. The search for human University of California, Berkeley and Roger C. Green Edited by Paul G. Bahn origins, 1860–1920; 6. Archaeology comes of age, 1920–1960; 7. New techniques and University of Auckland Foreword by Lord Renfrew competing philosophies, 1960–1990; 8. Current controversies and future trends; Bibliography; Table of archaeological periods worldwide; Chronology; Index; Acknowledgements. Cambridge Illustrated Histories 1999 253 x 203 mm 400pp 131 half-tones 102 colour plates 0 521 66946 4 Paperback £18.95

Forthcoming Archaeological Theory and Scientific Practice Andrew Jones University of Cambridge Is archaeology an art or a science? This question has been hotly debated over the last few decades with the rise of archaeological science. At the same time, The power of an anthropological approach This is the fullest and most authoritative to long-term history lies in its unique single-volume account of archaeology from archaeologists have seen a change in the intellectual character of their discipline, as ability to combine diverse evidence, from the earliest discoveries to the great archaeological artifacts to ethnographic texts excavations of the nineteenth and twentieth many writers have adopted approaches influenced by social theory. The discipline and comparative word lists. In this innovative centuries. Lavishly illustrated throughout book, Kirch and Green explicitly develop and global in scope, it tells the story of now encompasses both archaeological scientists and archaeological theorists, and the theoretical underpinnings, as well as the those explorations which have helped shape particular methods, for such a historical our knowledge of the past. From early discussion regarding the status of archaeology remains polarised. Andrew anthropology. Drawing upon and integrating digging in Greece and the Near East, the approaches of archaeology, comparative through the part played by archaeology in Jones argues that we need to analyse the practice of archaeology. Through an ethnography, and historical linguistics, they the ‘discovery’ of the Americas, to the advance a phylogenetic model for cultural unearthing of sites in Africa, Scandinavia, analysis of archaeological practice, influenced by recent developments in the diversification, and apply a triangulation the former Soviet Union, and Australasia, method for historical reconstruction. They the book describes individual events as part field of science studies, and with the aid of extensive case studies, he develops a new illustrate their approach through meticulous of a connected narrative amounting to a application to the history of the Polynesian thorough history of the subject for general framework which allows the interpretative and methodological components of the , and for the first time reconstruct readers. It is the first general history of in extensive detail the Ancestral Polynesian archaeology written by a team of specialists discipline to work in tandem. His reassessment of the status and character of that flourished in the Polynesian and the first history to cover every part of homeland – Hawaiki – some 2,500 years ago. the world. The book is complete with archaeology will be of interest to both students, scholars and professionals. Of great significance for Oceanic studies, time-period charts, lists of archaeological Kirch and Green’s book will be essential Topics in Contemporary Archaeology events, and a full index. reading for any anthropologist, prehistorian, 2001 228 x 152 mm 190pp 13 line diagrams ‘… a truly international history of 5 tables 12 graphs 12 maps linguist, or cultural historian concerned with archaeology … The Illustrated History is 0 521 79060 3 Hardback c. £35.00 the theory and method of long-term history. Publication October 2001 refreshing in that it presents an Contents: Prologue: on historical international view of archaeological anthropology; Part I. The Phylogenetic discovery and sometimes of changing ideas Model: Theory and Method: 1. The about the past.’ phylogenetic model in historical Brian Fagan, American Antiquity anthropology; 2. Methodologies: implementing the phylogenetic model; 3. Polynesia as a phylogenetic unit; Part II. Rediscovering ‘Hawaiki’: 4. The ancestral Polynesian world; 5. Subsistence; 6. Food preparation and cuisine; 7. Material culture; 8. Social and political organization; 9. Gods, rituals, and seasons; Epilogue: on history, phylogeny, and evolution. 2001 246 x 189 mm 400pp 21 line diagrams 3 half-tones 11 maps 0 521 78309 7 Hardback £47.50 0 521 78879 X Paperback £17.95 General Archaeology 3

Forthcoming from Stanford Ancient Egyptian Materials and II. Organic Materials: 9. Papyrus Bridget Leach and John Tait; 10. Basketry Willeke Greece before History Technology Wendrich; 11. Textiles Gillian Vogelsang- An Archaeological Companion and Guide Edited by Paul T. Nicholson Eastwood; 12. Leatherwork and skin Curtis Runnels University of Wales College of Cardiff products Carol van Driel-Murray; 13. Ivory Boston University and Ian Shaw and related materials Robert Morkot and and Priscilla M. Murray University College London Olga Krzyszkowska; 14. Ostrich eggshells Boston University Jacke Phillips; 15. Wood Geoffrey Killen, This book, a guide and companion to Nigel Hepper, Peter Gasson and Rowena the prehistoric archaeology of Greece, is Gale; 16. Mummies and mummification designed for students, travelers, and all A. Rosalie David; 17. Oil, fat and wax general readers interested in archaeology. Margaret Serpico and Raymond White; Greece has perhaps the longest and 18. Resins, amber and bitumen Margaret richest archaeological record in Europe, Serpico; 19. Adhesives and binders Richard and this book reviews what is known of Newman, Margaret Serpico and Raymond Greece from the earliest inhabitants in White; 20. Hair Joann Fletcher; Part III. the Stone Age to the end of the Bronze Food Technology: 21. Cereal production Age and the collapse of the Minoan and and processing Mary-Anne Murray; Mycenaean civilizations. The book 22. Brewing and baking Delwyn Samuel; describes the prehistoric cultures of 23. Viticulture and wine production Greece in chronological order, and Mary-Anne Murray; 24. Fruit, vegetables, illustrates with some 100 detailed pulses and condiments Mary-Anne Murray; drawings each culture’s typical artifacts, 25. Meat Processing Salima Ikram. architecture, burial customs, and art. 2000 276 x 219 mm 724pp 26 tables Written in an informal and accessible 393 figures style free of scientific jargon, the book 0 521 45257 0 Hardback £100.00 can be used in the classroom or as a This is a study of the procurement and Textbook guide for the traveler, or read simply for processing of raw materials employed by pleasure by anyone with a curiosity Egypt and the Egyptians the ancient Egyptians over the five Douglas J. Brewer about the earliest ages of this fascinating millennia of the Predynastic and Pharaonic region. University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign periods (c. 5500–332 BC). During this and Emily Teeter time, not only were there variations in the University of Chicago ‘Until now, there has been no preferred materials for particular types of guidebook in English that covers the artefacts, but also gradual processes of ‘ … a sophisticated and comprehensive entire sweep of the Stone Age, Minoan, technological change, and the industries of overview of pharaonic civilisation, touching and Mycenaean cultures of Greece. the Chalcolithic period were on every topic essential to the serious The authors have made significant complemented and sometimes superseded student. The book which draws on contributions both to our understanding by the innovations of the Bronze and Iron archaeological evidence attractively of the earliest period of occupation of Ages. Among the topics covered are stone presented admirably reflects the multi- the Greek peninsula and to our quarrying, the building of temples and disciplinary nature of Egyptology today … understanding of the relationship pyramids, techniques for preserving meat, This is a book that skillfully reveals the between humans and their landscape fish, and poultry, glass and faience, the complexity of ancient Egypt and which through time. The book is engaging baking of bread, brewing of beers, cannot fail to stimulate further interest.’ throughout and eminently readable.’ preparation of oils and perfumes, and the Egyptian Archaeology Karl M. Petruso, University of Texas, mummification of humans and animals. 1999 246 x 189 mm 236pp 27 line diagrams Arlington 23 half-tones 3 tables 10 figures 2 maps 12 plans Each chapter has been written by one or 0 521 44518 3 Hardback £40.00 2001 228 x 152 mm 192pp 117 line diagrams more specialists, drawing not only on 0 521 44984 7 Paperback £14.95 0 8047 4036 4 Hardback £35.00 conventional Egyptological skills but also 0 8047 4050 X Paperback £11.95 on expertise in the natural sciences as Mummies, Disease and Ancient Publication October 2001 applied to archaeological data. Cultures ‘Ancient Egyptian Materials and Second edition Technology … augments and extends Edited by Thomas Aidan Cockburn Lucas’s work. The editors have enlisted the Eve Cockburn specialist knowledge of thirty-four scholars Paleopathology Association to accomplish thier purpose, and the and Theodore A. Reyman resulting volume is very impressive.’ Formerly Mt Carmel Mercy Hospital, Detroit Times Literary Supplement ‘ … this book reads well, with a good Contents: 1. Introduction Paul Nicholson balance being struck between laboured and Ian Shaw; Part I. Inorganic Materials: description and a superficial skim: it is easy 2. Stone Barbara Aston, James Harrell and to forget than one is reading for learning Ian Shaw; 3. Soil Barry Kemp; 4. Painting rather than entertainment.’ materials Stephen Quirke and Lorna Lee; C. H. Hoyle, Endeavour 5. Pottery Janine Bourriau, Pamela Rose and 1998 246 x 189 mm 424pp 18 line diagrams 128 half-tones 23 tables Paul Nicholson; 6. Metals Jacke Ogden; 0 521 58060 9 Hardback £75.00 7. Egyptian faience Paul Nicholson; 8. Glass 0 521 58954 1 Paperback £25.95 Paul Nicholson and Julian Henderson; Part

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Textbook Travels with the Fossil Hunters Fire in the Sea Environmental Archaeology Peter Whybrow The Santorini Volcano: Natural History and Principles and Practice Natural History Museum, London the Legend of Atlantis Dena F. Dincauze Walter L. Friedrich University of Massachusetts, Amherst Aarhus Universitet, Denmark Translated by Alexander R. McBirney University of Oregon The catastrophic Bronze Age eruption of the Greek island of Santorini produced one of the largest explosions ever witnessed by humankind, destroyed settlements and possibly gave rise to the legend of Atlantis. This book reconstructs this dramatic event and will fire the imagination of a wide audience of readers. ‘This book, with its clear text and superb illustrations, is a suitable geological complement to the lavishly illustrated Twelve stories of the problems, curiosities publications of Santorini’s archaeological and geology that palaeontologists remains. Those wishing to place those encounter working in extreme field remains in a physical context will find it Archaeologists today need a wide range of conditions, from desert to frozen waste, most rewarding.’ scientific approaches to delineate and from mountain to forest. Copiously John Bennet, Times Higher Education interpret the ecology of their sites. This illustrated and with a foreword from David Supplement book is an authoritative and essential guide Attenborough, this fascinating book will 2000 276 x 219 mm 272pp 163 colour plates appeal to anyone interested in travelling 3 tables to archaeological methods and their 0 521 65290 1 Hardback £19.95 applications, illustrated by examples and fossils, amateurs and professionals ranging from the Palaeolithic, through alike. Archaeology and the Social classical civilizations, to urban archaeology. ‘ … a collection of well written History of Ships entertaining accounts … a good-humoured Contents: Part I. Introduction: Richard A. Gould and enlightening read!’ 1. Environmental archaeology and human Brown University, Rhode Island ecology; 2. Concepts for Bulletin of the British Ecological Society paleoenvironmental reconstruction; Contents: Foreword Sir David Attenbourgh; 3. Mechanisms of environmental change; Introduction Richard Fortey; 1. Across 4. Human responses to environmental Tibet by jeep, pony and foot Andrew change; Part II: 5. Introduction to Smith; 2. Fishing – and some dinosaurs – chronometry and correlation; 6. Measuring in the Sahara Alison Longbottom and Angela time with isotopes and magnetism; Part III: Milner; 3. Digging the rock Chris Stringer; 7. Climate: the driving forces; 8. Climate 4. A summer in Latvia Per Erik Ahlberg; reconstruction; Part IV. Geomorphology: 5. Brains in Abu Dhabi’s desert Peter J. 9. Landforms; 10. Landforms of shores and Whybrow; 6. Thomas Hardy, Driver ants shallow water; Part V. Sediments and Soils: and some West African fossils Steve Culver; 11. Basic principles of sedimentology and 7. Two passages to India Paul D. Taylor; soils science; 12. Archaeological matrices; 8. Digging for dragons in China Angela Part V. Vegetation: 13. Concepts and Milner; 9. Close encounterrs in Pakistan methods of paleobotany; 14. Vegetation in Peter J. Whybrow; 10. The day of a paleoecology; 15. Concepts and methods thousand fossils Peter Andrews; 11. Ancient for faunal paleoenvironments; 16. Faunal bones in the frozen continent Jerry Hooker; paleoecology; 17. Humans among animals; 12. Arabia Felix, fossilised fruits and the Part VIII. Integration: 18. Anthropocentric price of frogs Peter J. Whybrow; Postscript; Maritime archaeology deals with paleoecology. Index. shipwrecks and submerged settlements. 2000 247 x 174 mm 618pp 23 tables 65 figures 2000 255 x 255 mm 230pp 103 colour plates Studying maritime history, changes in ship- 0 521 32568 4 Hardback £70.00 0 521 66301 6 Hardback £20.00 building, navigation and shipboard life, it 0 521 31077 6 Paperback £24.95 reconstructs the infrastructure of overseas commerce, and provides fresh perspectives on cultures that produced the ships and sailors. This up-to-date book reviews the field and covers new developments in undersea technologies. 2000 247 x 174 mm 374pp 66 half-tones 8 tables 5 graphs 27 figures 0 521 56103 5 Hardback £47.50 0 521 56789 0 Paperback £17.95 General Archaeology 5

Second Edition The Cambridge Illustrated History Human Evolution, Language and Mind The Athenian Trireme of Prehistoric Art A Psychological and Archaeological Inquiry William Noble and Iain Davidson The History and Reconstruction of an Paul G. Bahn University of New England, Australia Ancient Greek Warship Foreword by Desmond Morris 1996 247 x 174 mm 284pp 39 line diagrams Second edition 9 half-tones 8 tables 4 maps J. S. Morrison ‘Paul Bahn’s expertise gives a welcome 0 521 57635 0 Paperback £16.95 University of Cambridge global perspective to prehistoric art and Co-published with the Natural History Museum J. F. Coates provides plenty of surprises, even for those Man’s Place in Evolution Ministry of Defence with some knowledge of the subject.’ Second edition and N. B. Rankov The Financial Times British Natural History Museum Royal Holloway, University of London ‘ … beautifully edited … Bahn has 1991 216 x 138 mm 103pp authored a book that will be useful to 0 521 40864 4 Paperback £10.50 nonspecialist professionals and students A History of Archaeological Thought with interests in the fasinating subject of Bruce G. Trigger parietal art.’ 1990 228 x 152 mm 516pp 18 line diagrams American Antiquity 18 half-tones 6 figures 3 maps 5 plans 0 521 33818 2 Paperback £20.95 Cambridge Illustrated Histories 1997 253 x 203 mm 334pp 164 colour plates Africans 1 map The History of a Continent 0 521 45473 5 Hardback £25.00 John Iliffe New in Paperback African Studies, 85 1995 247 x 174 mm 335pp 14 maps The City in Time and Space 0 521 48235 6 Hardback £42.50 0 521 48422 7 Paperback £15.95 Aidan Southall ‘Aidan Southall’s research in East Africa Journal pioneered what came to be known as urban Cambridge Archaeological Journal For this second edition of The Athenian anthropology. This book offers a unifying Editor: Chris Scarre Trireme, the book giving the technical and vision of the field that has been long and historical background to the reconstruction sorely needed. His impressive knowledge of Published for the McDonald Institute for of an ancient Greek warship, a number of world urbanism, spanning the beginnings of Archaeological Research substantive changes have been made. An civilisation to the present global oikumene, Cambridge Archaeological Journal is an entirely new chapter describes the trials and is deftly used for comparisons over time exciting periodical that covers significant proposes modifications to the ship’s design. and between the Old and the New World.’ archaeological research, both theoretical ‘ … reads like the best sort of detective Leonard Plotnicov, University of Pittsburgh and descriptive. Ranging widely in space 1999 228 x 152 mm 483pp 8 half-tones 3 maps and time, it focuses particularly on the role story.’ 0 521 78432 8 Paperback £17.95 Peter Jones, BBC History Magazine and development of human cognitive 2000 210 x 148 mm 348pp 42 line diagrams abilities as reflected in the religion, 54 half-tones 1 graph 15 maps Backlist titles iconography and other characteristics of 0 521 56419 0 Hardback £42.50 early societies. The journal seeks to 0 521 56456 5 Paperback £15.95 promote debate and discussion on crucial Dilmun and its Gulf Neighbours issues such as the origins of speech and The Archaeology of Rock-Art Harriet E. W. Crawford 1998 246 x 189 mm 186pp 49 line diagrams language, archaeological approaches to Edited by Christopher Chippindale 5 maps 6 plans symbolism and art, and the evidence for University of Cambridge 0 521 58348 9 Hardback £47.50 early human . Specific topics and Paul S. C. Tagon 0 521 58679 8 Paperback £17.95 covered in recent issues include: process Australian Museum, Sydney Sumer and the Sumerians and agency in early state formation; Rock-art provides lively and captivating Harriet E. W. Crawford cosmologies in the British Iron Age; cave images of animals and people painted and 1991 246 x 189 mm 192pp art, autism and the evolution of the human carved in caves and on open rock surfaces. 0 521 38850 3 Paperback £17.95 mind; the symbolism of shellmounds in This collection explores how we can Nationalism, Politics and the Practice of the San Francisco Bay area; and the use of reliably learn from rock-art as a material Archaeology colour in early societies. In addition to record of distant times by adapting the Edited by Philip L. Kohl and Clare Fawcett major articles and shorter notes, Cambridge methods of archaeology to the special 1996 228 x 152 mm 341pp 4 maps Archaeological Journal also includes review subject of rock-art. 0 521 48065 5 Hardback £47.50 features on recent books of special interest. 0 521 55839 5 Paperback £17.95 Contributors: Paul Tacon, Christopher The journal has a distinguished editorial Chippindale, David S. Whitley, Sven Reading the Past board that includes British and American Ouzman, Michael A. Klassen, Thomas A. Current Approaches to Interpretation in scholars of international repute. Archaeology Subscriptions Dowson, Jean Clottes, Richard Bradley, Second edition Volume 11 in 2001: April and Kalle Sognnes, Meredith Wilson, Ralph Ian Hodder October Hartley, Anne Vasser, Benjamin Smith, 1991 216 x 138 mm 235pp 8 line diagrams Institutions print only: £59 Carolyn E. Boyd, Pieter Jolly, Anne 1 half-tone Individuals print only: £26 0 521 40957 8 Paperback £17.95 Solomon, Eva M. Walderhaug, Henri-Paul ISSN 0959-7743 Francfort, Jo McDonald, John Clegg 1999 246 x 189 mm 392pp 3 tables 192 figures 0 521 57256 8 Hardback £55.00 0 521 57619 9 Paperback £19.95

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Textbook Series Contents: 1. Introduction; 2. Geographic Forthcoming setting and environment; 3. Settlement Inspection copies available patterns; 4. Making a living: tributary The Archaeology of Ancient economics of the fifth and fourth Greece Case Studies in Early millennia; 5. A changing way of life: the James Whitley Societies oikos-based economy of the third University of Wales College of Cardiff millennium; 6. The growth of bureaucracy; Series Editor: Rita Wright The Archaeology of Ancient Greece 7. Ideology and images of power; 8. Death Dept of Anthropology, New York University provides an up-to-date synthesis of and the ideology of community. current research on the material culture This series aims to introduce students to Case Studies in Early Societies, 1 of Greece in the Archaic and Classical historically important societies that have 1999 228 x 152 mm 272pp 29 half-tones periods (1000–300 BC). The rich and been the subject of sustained archaeological 23 tables 10 graphs 13 figures 9 maps 11 plans diverse material culture of ancient research. Each study is also designed to 0 521 57334 3 Hardback £32.50 0 521 57568 0 Paperback £11.95 Greece has always provoked admiration demonstrate a contemporary method of and even wonder, but it is seldom archaeological analysis in action, and the Ancient Oaxaca analysed as a key to our understanding authors are all specialists currently engaged of Greek civilisation. Dr Whitley shows in field research. Tracing long-term Richard Blanton Purdue University, Indiana how the material evidence can be used developments, and describing and to address central historical questions analyzing a discrete segment in the G. Feinman University of Wisconsin, Madison for which literary evidence is often prehistory or history of a region, they insufficient. He also situates Greek art represent an invaluable tool for S. Kowalewski University of Georgia within the broader field of Greek comparative analysis. Clear, well organized, material culture, providing an authoritative and succinct, the case studies and L. Nicholas The Field Museum, Chicago historically more accurate perspective on will also be an important resource for both. This is a significant contribution Just after 500 BC, one of the earliest states students and scholars in related fields, such to the integration of archaeological and in the New World developed in the Valley as anthropology and ethnohistory and for art historical evidence. anybody interested in ancient civilisations. of Oaxaca. The newly created political institution profoundly transformed the Contents: Part I. Approaches to Greek Ancient Mesopotamia society and its technology. This book Archaeology: 1. Introduction: classical Susan Pollock investigates the archaeology of the region, archaeology and its objects; 2. Great State University of New York, Binghamton throwing light on the causes and traditions: classical scholarship and consequences of these changes. classical archaeology; 3. Modern archaeologies of Greece; 4. Chronology Contents: 1. Introduction: Mesoamerica and terminology; Part II. Archaic Greek: and its pre-Hispanic civilization; 2. The 5. Archaic Greece, 1000–700 BC; Valley of Oaxaca: a regional setting for an 6. The Aegean, the Levant and the early state; 3. The origins of Monte Alban; West: the orientalising phenomenon; 4. The great transformation; 5. Synthesis 7. Gods, heroes and sacred places; and conclusion; Epilogue. 8. The city, the state and the Polis; Case Studies in Early Societies, 2 9. Art, narrative and monumentality; 1999 228 x 152 mm 164pp 4 half-tones 2 tables 10. Regional archaeologies; Part III. 4 graphs 9 figures 20 maps 6 plans 0 521 57114 6 Hardback £37.50 Classical Greece: 11. Defining the 0 521 57787 X Paperback £13.95 classical: classical art; 12. Cities and sanctuaries of Classical Greece; 13. The Cambridge World archaeology of democracy: Classical Athens; 14. Beyond the Polis: the Archaeology countryside of Classical Greece; Series Editor: Norman Yoffee 15. Epilogue: towards Hellenistic University of Michigan Susan Pollock’s detailed treatment of early archaeology. state and urban societies in lowland Cambridge World Archaeology is addressed Cambridge World Archaeology Mesopotamia covers nearly three millennia, to students and professional archaeologists, 2001 247 x 174 mm 547pp 46 line diagrams from approximately 5000 to 2100 BC. and to academics in related disciplines. The 87 half-tones 1 table 40 maps books present a survey of the archaeology 0 521 62205 0 Hardback c. £60.00 Written for an undergraduate audience, her 0 521 62733 8 Paperback c. £22.95 approach is explicitly anthropological, of a region of the world, providing an up- Publication October 2001 drawing on contemporary theoretical to-date account of research, and integrate perspectives to enrich our understanding of recent findings with new concerns of the ancient Mesopotamian past. interpretation. While they focus on a specific region, they also cover broader ‘ … a very useful addition to the growing cultural trends, and consider the body of secondary archaeological literature implications of regional findings for cross- on Mesopotamia … It is also well written, cultural interpretations. carefully referenced, indexed, suitably illustrated and includes an annoted bibliography. As such, it should certainly appeal to its audience. Antiquity General Archaeology 7

Forthcoming Forthcoming European Societies in the Bronze Early Neolithic Greece Ethnoarchaeology in Action Age Catherine Perles Nicholas David A. F. Harding Université de Paris X University of Calgary University of Durham and Carol Kramer The Bronze Age was crucial in the University of Arizona formation of Europe emerging into history in the later first millennium BC. Focusing on the material culture remains of the period, Anthony Harding provides an interpretation of the main trends in human development during this timespan. The result is a comprehensive study for specialists and students. Cambridge World Archaeology 2000 246 x 189 mm 570pp 13 half-tones 104 figures 18 maps 0 521 36477 9 Hardback £60.00 0 521 36729 8 Paperback £21.95

Second Edition Winner of the Society for American Archaeology Book Award 2000 Farmers made a sudden and dramatic The Palaeolithic Societies of appearance in Greece around 7000 BC, Europe bringing with them new ceramics and Ethnoarchaeology first developed as the Second edition crafts, and establishing settled villages. study of ethnographic material culture Clive Gamble They were Europe’s first farmers, and their from archaeological perspectives. Over the University of Southampton settlements provide the link between the past half century it has expanded its scope, How did Neanderthal societies differ from first agricultural communities in the Near especially to cultural and social those of the first modern humans in East and the subsequent spread of the new anthropology. Both authors are leading Europe 35,000 years ago? This technologies to the Balkans and on to practitioners, and their theoretical investigation of archaeological evidence Western Europe. Catherine Perlès argues perspective embraces both the from stone tools, hunting and campsites that the stimulus for the spread of processualism of the New Archaeology and reveals much about the differing scale of agriculture to Europe was a colonisation the post-processualism of the 1980s and social interaction and abilities to negotiate movement involving small groups of 90s. A case-study approach enables a social worlds, and enhances our maritime peoples. Drawing evidence from balanced global geographic and topical understanding of this period. a wide range of archaeological sources, coverage, including consideration of including often neglected ‘small finds’, and materials in French and German. Three Cambridge World Archaeology 1999 246 x 189 mm 527pp 5 half-tones introducing daring new perspectives on introductory chapters introduce the subject 106 tables 16 graphs 84 figures 13 maps funerary rituals and the distribution of and its history, survey the theory, and 0 521 65105 0 Hardback £65.00 figurines, she constructs a complex and discuss field methods and ethics. Ten 0 521 65872 1 Paperback £23.95 subtle picture of early Neolithic societies, topical chapters consider formation overturning the traditional view that these processes, subsistence, the study of artifacts The Archaeology of Elam societies were simple and self-sufficient. and style, settlement systems, site structure Formation and Transformation of an Ancient Iranian State Cambridge World Archaeology and architecture, specialist craft 2001 247 x 174 mm c.352pp 68 line diagrams production, trade and exchange, and D. T. Potts 11 tables 17 maps mortuary practices and ideology. University of Sydney 0 521 80181 8 Hardback c. £60.00 Ethnoarchaeology in Action concludes with ‘This is the most comprehensive and 0 521 00027 0 Paperback c. £22.95 Publication September 2001 ethnoarchaeology’s contributions actual and detailed study of the many Elamite worlds potential, and with a look at its place that existed over the course of the within anthropology. It is generously millennia.’ illustrated, including many photographs of Times Higher Education Supplement leading ethnoarchaeologists in action. Cambridge World Archaeology Cambridge World Archaeology 1999 246 x 189 mm 520pp 42 half-tones 2001 247 x 174 mm 480pp 30 line diagrams 92 figures 11 maps 66 half-tones 1 graph 3 maps 0 521 56358 5 Hardback £70.00 0 521 66105 6 Hardback c. £55.00 0 521 56496 4 Paperback £23.95 0 521 66779 8 Paperback c. £19.95 Publication July 2001 The Rise of Civilization in India and Pakistan Briget Allchin and Raymond Allchin Cambridge World Archaeology 1982 247 x 174 mm 392pp 82 line diagrams 96 half-tones 5 tables 11 maps 9 plans 0 521 28550 X Paperback £23.95

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Ancient South America New Studies in Forthcoming in Paperback Karen Olsen Bruhns Archaeology House and Society in the Ancient Cambridge World Archaeology Series Editors: Lord Colin Renfrew Greek World 1994 247 x 174 mm 448pp 48 line diagrams 192 half-tones 2 tables 11 maps University of Cambridge Lisa C. Nevett 0 521 27761 2 Paperback £22.95 Wendy Ashmore Open University, Milton Keynes University of California, Riverside The Aegean Bronze Age Clive Gamble Oliver Dickinson University of Southampton Cambridge World Archaeology 1994 247 x 174 mm 364pp 101 line diagrams Archaeology has made enormous advances 30 half-tones recently, both in its volume of discoveries 0 521 45664 9 Paperback £21.95 and in its character as an intellectual The Bronze Age of Southeast Asia discipline. New techniques have helped to Charles Higham further the range and rigour of enquiry and Cambridge World Archaeology have also encouraged interdisciplinary 1996 247 x 174 mm 381pp 78 line diagrams communication. The aim of this series is to 32 half-tones 50 maps make available to a wider audience the 0 521 56505 7 Paperback £23.95 results of these developments. The coverage The Archaeology of Korea is world-wide and extends from the Sarah Milledge Nelson palaeolithic to historical times. Cambridge World Archaeology Forthcoming 1993 247 x 174 mm 323pp 86 line diagrams 8 half-tones 6 tables 13 maps Making History in Banda 0 521 40443 6 Hardback £60.00 Anthropological Visions of Africa’s Past 0 521 40783 4 Paperback £20.95 Ann B. Stahl This book re-examines traditional African Archaeology State University of New York, Binghamton assumptions about the nature of social Second edition relationships in Greek households during David W. Phillipson Drawing on evidence from several disciplines, Ann Brower Stahl reconstructs the Classical and Hellenistic periods. Cambridge World Archaeology Through detailed exploration of 1994 247 x 174 mm 284pp 134 line diagrams the daily lives of Banda villagers of west 62 half-tones central Ghana, from the time that they archaeological evidence from individual 0 521 44103 X Hardback £55.00 were drawn into the Niger trade (around houses, Lisa Nevett identifies a recognisable 0 521 44658 9 Paperback £19.95 1300 AD) until British overrule was concept of the citizen household as a social Europe in the Neolithic established early in the twentieth century. unit, and suggests that this was present in The Creation of New Worlds The case study aims to closely integrate numerous Greek cities. She argues that in Alasdair W. R. Whittle perspectives drawn from archaeology, such households relations between men Cambridge World Archaeology history and anthropology in African and women, traditionally perceived as 1996 247 x 174 mm 459pp 8 line diagrams studies. dominating the domestic environment, 45 half-tones 64 figures 7 maps should be placed within the wider context 0 521 44476 4 Hardback £75.00 New Studies in Archaeology 0 521 44920 0 Paperback £25.95 2001 247 x 174 mm c.296pp 7 line diagrams of domestic activity. Although gender was 11 half-tones 23 maps an important cultural factor which helped 0 521 80182 6 Hardback c. £45.00 to shape the organisation of the house, this Publication July 2001 was balanced against other influences, notably the relationship between household members and outsiders. At the same time the role of the household in relation to the wider social structures of the polis, or city state, changed rapidly through time, with the house itself coming to represent an important symbol of personal prestige. New Studies in Archaeology 2001 247 x 174 mm 234pp 5 half-tones 3 graphs 1 figure 2 maps 51 plans 0 521 00025 4 Paperback £15.95 Publication April 2001 Also available 0 521 64349 X Hardback £47.50 General Archaeology 9

Coins and Power in Late Iron Age Ceramic Theory and Cultural Process Architecture and Power in the Ancient Andes Britain Dean E. Arnold The Archaeology of Public Buildings Jerry D. Moore John Creighton New Studies in Archaeology New Studies in Archaeology University of Reading 1988 228 x 152 mm 288pp 0 521 27259 9 Paperback £18.95 1996 271 x 146 mm 272pp 3 line diagrams Combining archaeological, literary and 3 half-tones 6 graphs 38 figures 1 map 46 plans numismatic evidence, John Creighton Ecology and Ceramic Production in an 0 521 55363 6 Hardback £50.00 paints a vivid picture of how people in Late Andean Community Dean E. Arnold The Chaco Anasazi Iron Age Britain reacted to the changing Sociopolitical Evolution in the Prehistoric world around them, and how rulers New Studies in Archaeology Southwest 1993 247 x 174 mm 310pp 74 line diagrams Lynne Sebastian bolstered their power through use of 49 half-tones 9 tables 4 maps imagery on coins, myths, language, and 0 521 43289 8 Hardback £60.00 New Studies in Archaeology material culture. Includes full index of Iron 1996 247 x 174 mm 195pp 3 line diagrams 12 half-tones 2 graphs 3 maps 1 plan Age coins. Domestic Ceramic Production and Spatial Organization 0 521 57468 4 Paperback £13.95 0 521 40367 7 Hardback £37.50 New Studies in Archaeology A Mexican Case Study in Ethnoarchaeology 2000 247 x 174 mm 266pp 45 half-tones Philip J. Arnold III The Collapse of Complex Societies 2 tables 4 graphs 34 figures 6 maps New Studies in Archaeology 0 521 77207 9 Hardback £47.50 Joseph Tainter 1991 247 x 174 mm 194pp 20 line diagrams New Studies in Archaeology 11 half-tones 39 tables 5 maps The Birth of the Gods and the 0 521 39199 7 Hardback £37.50 1990 247 x 174 mm 260pp 30 line diagrams Origins of Agriculture 1 half-tone Ancient Mesoamerica 0 521 38673 X Paperback £21.95 Jacques Cauvin A Comparison of Change in Three Regions An Ethnography of the Neolithic Institut de Prehistoire Orientale, Jales, France Second edition Early Prehistoric Societies in Southern Scandinavia Translated by Trevor Watkins Richard E. Blanton Christopher Tilley University of Edinburgh Stephen A. Kowalewski Gary M. Feinman New Studies in Archaeology This innovative study of the great cultural and and Laura M. Finsten 1996 271 x 146 mm 385pp 38 line diagrams economic changes in the Near East between 30 half-tones 19 colour plates 34 tables 4 graphs 10,000 and 7,000 BC as Palaeolithic societies New Studies in Archaeology 43 figures 35 maps 30 plans 1993 253 x 177 mm 298pp 61 line diagrams 0 521 56096 9 Hardback £65.00 of hunter-gatherers gave way to village 11 half-tones 4 tables communities of Neolithic food-producers 0 521 44053 X Hardback £55.00 The Archaeology of Rank argues that the Neolithic revolution must be 0 521 44606 6 Paperback £19.95 Paul K. Wason understood as an intellectual transformation, Religion and Empire New Studies in Archaeology revealing itself in symbolic activities. The Dynamics of Aztec and Inca Expansionism 1994 247 x 174 mm 223pp 1 line diagram Geoffrey W. Conrad 1 half-tone 3 tables ‘This important book gives the best 0 521 38072 3 Hardback £40.00 available overview of the evidence in this and Arthur A. Demarest significant field … and it offers clearly and New Studies in Archaeology Style and Society in Dark Age Greece 1988 228 x 152 mm 284pp The Changing Face of a Pre-literate Society persuasively an entirely fresh insight into 0 521 31896 3 Paperback £21.95 1100–700 BC the Neolithic Revolution.’ James Whitley Nomads in Archaeology Professor Colin Renfrew, on the original New Studies in Archaeology Roger Cribb French edition 1991 247 x 174 mm 245pp 21 line diagrams New Studies in Archaeology New Studies in Archaeology 39 colour plates 14 tables 0 521 37383 2 Hardback £47.50 2000 247 x 174 mm 280pp 61 line diagrams 1991 247 x 174 mm 267pp 78 half-tones 8 half-tones 9 maps 7 tables 0 521 32881 0 Hardback £50.00 A Chesapeake Family and their Slaves 0 521 65135 2 Hardback £37.50 A Study in Historical Archaeology The Limits of Settlement Growth Anne Elizabeth Yentsch New in Paperback A Theoretical Outline New Studies in Archaeology Roland Fletcher Europe before History 1994 234 x 156 mm 469pp 58 line diagrams Kristian Kristiansen New Studies in Archaeology 40 half-tones 44 tables 18 maps Göteborgs Universitet, Sweden 1995 274 x 146 mm 302pp .6 half-tones 0 521 43293 6 Hardback £60.00 3 tables 48 graphs 45 figures 0 521 46730 6 Paperback £20.95 ‘ … this book is a substantial advance in 0 521 43085 2 Hardback £60.00 the quest for a socially informed history of The Evolution of the Polynesian Chiefdoms the era before writing.’ Patrick Vinton Kirch The Times Higher Supplement New Studies in Archaeology New Studies in Archaeology 1989 247 x 174 mm 328pp 1999 247 x 174 mm 536pp 80 line diagrams 0 521 27316 1 Paperback £25.95 16 half-tones 38 tables 30 graphs 83 maps 0 521 78436 0 Paperback £19.95 The Archaeology of Political Structure Settlement Analysis in a Classic Maya Polity Art and the Early Greek State Olivier de Montmollin Michael Shanks New Studies in Archaeology Stanford University 1989 247 x 174 mm 308pp 0 521 36232 6 Hardback £60.00 A contribution to recent debates on emerging Greek city states in the first millennium BC. New Studies in Archaeology 1999 247 x 174 mm 256pp 8 half-tones 10 tables 51 figures 0 521 56117 5 Hardback £45.00

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Egyptology at the University of Oxford, New Directions in Documentary Archaeology in the New World and Norman Yoffee, Professor of Edited by Mary C. Beaudry Archaeology Series Archaeology and Near Eastern Studies at New Directions in Archaeology Series the University of Michigan, in 1992. In an Forthcoming 1993 276 x 219 mm 224pp 26 line diagrams influential paper, they compared and 22 half-tones 29 tables 42 maps The Archaeology of Urban contrasted the nature of social and political 0 521 44999 5 Paperback £14.95 power in Egypt and Mesopotamia. This Landscapes Factional Competition and Political Edited by Alan Mayne was the first analysis of the impact of Development in the New World University of Melbourne wealth and high culture on the Edited by Elizabeth M. Brumfiel and Tim Murray development of states. The contributors to and John W. Fox La Trobe University, Victoria the present book apply the classic New Directions in Archaeology Series This exciting collection on a new Baines/Yoffee model to a range of ancient 1994 246 x 189 mm 246pp 19 line diagrams states around the world, providing 5 half-tones 17 tables 32 maps movement in urban archaeology 0 521 38400 1 Hardback £47.50 investigates the historical archaeology of documentary and archaeological evidence urban slums. The stuff that is dug up – on the production and uses of ‘high The Abandonment of Settlements and broken dinner plates, glass grog bottles, culture’, literature and monumental Regions architecture. There are chapters on Ethnoarchaeological and Archaeological and innumerable tonnes of buiding Approaches debris, nails and plaster samples – will Mesoamerica, the Andes, the Indus Valley, the Han Dynasty of China, and Greece Catherine M. Cameron not quickly find its way into museum and Steve A. Tomka collections. But, properly interpreted, it during the Roman empire, while others expand on the original Egypt-Mesopotamia New Directions in Archaeology Series yields evidence of lives and communities 1996 246 x 189 mm 201pp 32 half-tones that have left little in the way of written comparison. 25 tables 17 maps records. Including twelve case studies, Contributors: Mary Van Buren, Janet 0 521 57469 2 Paperback £18.95 five on cities in the United States and Richards, John Baines, Norman Yoffee, Bad Year Economics one each on London and Sheffield, and David O’Connor, Rosemary A. Joyce, Cultural Responses to Risk and Uncertainty futher chapters on Cape Town, Sydney, Jonathan Mark Kenoyer, Susan E. Alcock, Edited by Paul Halstead Melbourne and Quebec City, it maps Bennet Bronson, Elizabeth M. Brumfiel and John O’Shea out a new field, which will attrach the New Directions in Archaeology Series New Directions in Archaeology Series attention of a range of students and 2000 246 x 189 mm 177pp 63 figures 1989 279 x 215 mm 160pp scholars outside archaeology, in 0 521 77212 5 Hardback £42.50 0 521 33021 1 Hardback £35.00 0 521 77671 6 Paperback £15.95 particular historical sociologists and The Ancient Mind historians. Beyond Chiefdoms Edited by Colin Renfrew and Ezra B. W. Zubrow New Directions in Archaeology Series Pathways to Complexity in Africa New Directions in Archaeology Series 2001 246 x 189 mm 180pp 15 line diagrams Edited by Susan Keech McIntosh 19 half-tones 8 maps 1994 246 x 189 mm 209pp 28 line diagrams 0 521 77022 X Hardback c. £45.00 Rice University, Houston 13 half-tones 15 tables 6 maps 0 521 77975 8 Paperback c. £15.95 Criticising the popular view about the 0 521 45620 7 Paperback £18.95 Publication November 2001 progressive development of powerful Archaeological Theory hierarchies led by chiefs and kings, this Who Sets the Agenda? Order, Legitimacy and Wealth in book offers evidence from case studies in Edited by Norman Yoffee Ancient States sub-Saharan Africa supporting the idea that and Andrew Sherratt Edited by Janet Richards complexity has emerged and developed in a New Directions in Archaeology Series University of Michigan, Ann Arbor variety of ways. It includes contributions 1993 246 x 189 mm 149pp 14 line diagrams 0 521 44958 8 Paperback £16.95 and Mary Van Buren from historians, archaeologists, and Colorado State University anthropologists. Contributors: Susan Keech Mcintosh, Aidan Southall, Ann B. Stahl, Roderick J. Mcintosh, Raymond N. Asombang, Igor Kopytoff, Nicholas David, Judy Sterner, James Denbow, Peter Robertshaw, David L. Schoenbrun, Pierre de Maret, Jan Vansina New Directions in Archaeology Series 1999 216 x 138 mm 186pp 3 half-tones 7 tables 15 figures 12 maps 0 521 63074 6 Hardback £42.50

Celtic Chiefdom, Celtic State The Evolution of Complex Social Systems in Prehistoric Europe Edited by Bettina Arnold and D. Blair Gibson New Directions in Archaeology Series 1998 246 x 189 mm 171pp 1 table 7 figures 21 maps 8 plans 0 521 58579 1 Paperback £11.95 Three terms, Order, Legitimacy and Wealth, delineate a new comparative approach to ancient civilizations initially developed by John Baines, Professor of General Archaeology 11

Textbook Series Sampling in Archaeology Zooarchaeology Inspection copies available Clive Orton Elizabeth J. Reitz University College London University of Georgia and Elizabeth S. Wing Cambridge Manuals in Florida Museum of Natural History Archaeology ‘The volume is well structured, and begins Series Editors: Don Brothwell with an absorbing overview of the University of York development of zooarchaeology … The Graeme Barker book gives a discursive introduction, with University of Leicester sufficient substance to hold the attention of Dena Dincauze those with some background knowledge, University of Massachusetts, Amherst whilst remaining accessible to general Priscilla Renouf readers.’ Memorial University of Newfoundland Antiquity Cambridge Manuals in Archaeology New 1999 247 x 174 mm 475pp 41 tables See page 1 for more details 110 figures 0 521 48069 8 Hardback £75.00 Excavation 0 521 48529 0 Paperback £26.95 Steve Roskams Lithics University of York William Andrefsky, Jr The first overview of sampling for Cambridge Manuals in Archaeology archaeologists for over twenty years, this 1998 247 x 174 mm 286pp 36 tables manual offers a comprehensive account of 101 figures 0 521 57084 0 Hardback £55.00 the applications of statistical sampling 0 521 57815 9 Paperback £19.95 theory which are essential to modern archaeological practice at a range of scales, Alluvial Geoarchaeology from the regional to the microscopic. Floodplain Archaeology and Environmental Change A. G. Brown Bringing archaeologists up to date with an Cambridge Manuals in Archaeology aspect of their work which is often 1997 247 x 174 mm 401pp 29 half-tones misunderstood, it includes a discussion of 131 figures the relevance of sampling theory to 0 521 56097 7 Hardback £65.00 archaeological interpretation, and considers 0 521 56820 X Paperback £22.95 its fundamental place in fieldwork and Shells post-excavation study. It demonstrates the Cheryl Claassen vast range of techniques that are available, Cambridge Manuals in Archaeology only some of which are widely used by 1998 247 x 174 mm 288pp 9 half-tones archaeologists. A section on statistical 21 tables 29 figures 0 521 57036 0 Hardback £60.00 theory also reviews latest developments in 0 521 57852 3 Paperback £20.95 A clear account of contemporary the field, and the formal mathematics is techniques in the theory and practice of available in an appendix, cross-referenced Photography in Archaeology and excavation. with the main text. Conservation Second edition Cambridge Manuals in Archaeology Cambridge Manuals in Archaeology Peter G. Dorrell 2001 247 x 174 mm 328pp 30 line diagrams 2000 247 x 174 mm 274pp 36 line diagrams Cambridge Manuals in Archaeology 42 half-tones 7 half-tones 12 tables 18 graphs 10 maps 0 521 35534 6 Hardback £47.50 0 521 56226 0 Hardback £47.50 1994 247 x 174 mm 282pp 2 line diagrams 0 521 79801 9 Paperback £17.95 0 521 56666 5 Paperback £17.95 100 half-tones 0 521 45534 0 Hardback £50.00 Publication April 2001 0 521 45554 5 Paperback £18.95

Pottery in Archaeology Clive Orton Paul Tyers and Alan Vince Cambridge Manuals in Archaeology 1993 247 x 174 mm 287pp 47 line diagrams 19 half-tones 8 tables 0 521 44597 3 Paperback £19.95

Vertebrate Taphonomy R. Lee Lyman Cambridge Manuals in Archaeology 1994 247 x 174 mm 550pp 20 line diagrams 26 half-tones 0 521 45840 4 Paperback £29.95

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Classical Forthcoming Forthcoming Archaeology The Natural History of Pompeii Surveying Instruments of Greece A Systematic Survey and Rome Edited by Wilhelmina Feemster New M. J. T. Lewis Jashemski University of Hull An Island Archaeology of the Early University of Maryland, College Park Cyclades The sudden destruction of Pompeii, Cyprian Broodbank Herculaneum and the surrounding University College London Campanian countryside following the This book uses comparative island eruption of Vesuvius in AD 79 archaeology to reinterpret a vital phase in preserved the remarkable evidence that early Aegean history. Cyprian Broodbank has made possible this reconstruction of presents the first modern analysis of the natural history of the local Cycladic culture, tracing the development environment. Following the prototype of Neolithic and Early Bronze Age societies of Pliny the Elder’s Natural History, in these islands from first colonisation various aspects of the natural history of through to incorporation, three millennia Pompeii are discussed and analyzed by a later, in the world system of the Minoan team of eminent scientists, many of palaces and the wider Near East. The have whom collaborated with Jashemski archaeology of this region is rich and well- during her years of excavation of several documented, and allows Dr Broodbank to gardens in the Vesuvian area. This reformulate early Cycladic history and to volume brings together the work of deploy detailed examples that challenge geologists, soil specialists, The Greeks and, especially, the Romans are established approaches to island paleobotanists, botanists, famous for the heroic engineering of their archaeology. He shows that islanders can paleontologists, biologists, chemists, aqueducts, tunnels and roads. They also actively define their cultural space and dendrochronologists, ichthyologists, measured the circumference of the earth environments, and that their communities zoologists, ornithologists, mamologists, and the heights of mountains with fair are linked by complex relations to the non- herpetologists, entymologists, and precision. This book presents new insular world. This book provides fresh archaeologists, affording a thorough translations (from Greek, Latin, Arabic, perspectives and challenges for island picture of the landscape, flora, and Hebrew and Syriac) of all the ancient texts archaeologists and Mediterranean fauna of the ancient sites. The detailed concerning surveying, including major specialists. and rigorously scientific catalogues, sources hitherto untapped. It explores the which are copiously illustrated, provide history of surveying instruments, notably Contents: Prologue: islands of ‘prehistory’; a checklist of the flora and fauna upon the Greek dioptra and the Roman libra, 1. Whither island archaeology?; which future generations of scholars can and with the help of tests with 2. Cycladic approaches; 3. Islands, people continue to build. reconstructions explains how they were and seafaring; 4. The dawn treaders; 2002 279 x 215 mm 500pp 12 line diagrams used in practice. This is a subject which has 5. Cultures of colonisation; 6. Small 159 half-tones 216 colour plates 23 tables never been tackled before in anything like worlds; 7. Which islands in the stream?; 0 521 80054 4 Hardback c. £85.00 this depth. The Greeks emerge as the 8. Paint, paddles and the politics of value; Publication February 2002 pioneers of instrumental surveying and, 9. Ulysses without sails; 10. An altered though their equipment and methods were archipelago; 11. The emergence of Minoan simple by modern standards, they and the dominance; 12. Cycladic archaeology as Romans can be credited with a level of island archaeology. technical sophistication which must count 2000 246 x 189 mm 434pp 15 line diagrams 71 half-tones 14 tables 14 graphs 97 maps as one of the greatest achievements of the 0 521 78272 4 Hardback £50.00 ancient world. Contents: Introduction; Part I. Instruments and Methods: 1. The basic elements; 2. Background to the dioptra; 3. The dioptra; 4. The libra; 5. The groma; 6. The hodometer; Part II. Practical Applications: 7. Measurement of the earth; 8. Mountain heights; 9. Canals and aqueducts; 10. Tunnels; 11. Roman roads; 12. Epilogue; Part III. The Sources: The treatises; Other sources; Appendix. Uncertain devices. 2001 228 x 152 mm 409pp 6 half-tones 100 figures 0 521 79297 5 Hardback £55.00 Publication April 2001 Classical Archaeology 13

Forthcoming in Paperback New in Paperback New in Paperback Mosaics of the Greek and The Alexander Mosaic The Athenian Acropolis Roman World Stories of Victory and Defeat History, Mythology, and Archaeology from the Neolithic Era to the Present Katherine Dunbabin Ada Cohen McMaster University, Ontario Dartmouth College, New Hampshire Jeffrey M. Hurwit The Alexander Mosaic: Stories of Victory and University of Oregon Defeat focuses on one of the richest, most The Athenian Acropolis is a comprehensive complex and visually stunning monuments study of the art, archaeology, myths, cults, of classical antiquity. and function of one of the most illustrious ‘This is a rich, subtle, well-researched, fair, sites in the West. It is the most thorough and often convincing study … [It] is book on the Acropolis to be published in essential reading for any serious student of English in nearly a century. Greek art in general and the Alexander ‘For sheer volume of information presented Mosaic in particular.’ in an accessible format … the book has no American Journal of Archaeology peer and it certainly should be part of the Cambridge Studies in Classical Art and library of every serious student of ancient Iconography Athens … Hurwit gives us what must be 2000 253 x 203 mm 302pp 78 half-tones pretty much the last word on the Acropolis 14 colour plates of the 20th century. Thanks to this book, it 0 521 77543 4 Paperback £19.95 is a monument we can revisit again and Also available again.’ 0 521 56339 9 Hardback £55.00 Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2000 279 x 215 mm 408pp 70 line diagrams Greek Art 172 half-tones 10 colour plates Mark D. Fullerton 0 521 42834 3 Paperback £18.95 Ohio State University Also available This is the first major study of the art of 0 521 41786 4 Hardback £52.50 mosaic in antiquity. Covering over a thousand years through an area from New in Paperback Britain to Syria and beautifully Vitruvius: “Ten Books on illustrated with over 350 photographs, it Architecture” studies the technical aspects and social Edited by Ingrid D. Rowland implications of mosaics as domestic and Southwestern University public decoration. and Thomas Noble Howe ‘This book is a masterpiece of visual, This new, critical edition of Vitruvius’ Te n historical, technical and social analysis.’ Books of Architecture is the first to be Peter Jones, The Sunday Telegraph published for an English-language audience in more than half a century. The Contents: Introduction; Part I. translation, along with the critical Historical and Regional Development: commentary and illustrations, aims to 1. Origins and pebble mosaics; shape a new image of Vitruvius who 2. The invention of tessellated mosaics: emerges as an inventive, creative thinker. Hellenistic mosaics in the east; ‘ … this is an important publishing event 3. Hellenistic mosaics in Italy; In the arts especially, the values and in the study of architectural history. With 4. Mosaics in Italy: Republican and customs of ancient Greece received their Vitruvius now made less obscure, we can Imperial; 5. The north-western most lucid expression during the period see with much greater clarity the inherent provinces; 6. Britain; 7. The North from 480 to 323 BC. In this new overview, flexibility of the Classical system at the African provinces; 8. Sicily under the Mark Fullerton presents a history of Greek time when there was no such thing as Empire: Piazza Armerina; 9. The Iberian art and the idea of the classical through a Classical architecture – only architecture.’ peninsula; 10. Syria and the east; range of media and materials. Architects Journal 2000 228 x 152 mm 176pp 40 half-tones 11. Palestine and Transjordan; 12. Greece: 2001 279 x 215 mm 352pp 110 line diagrams the Imperial period; 13. Asia Minor, 80 colour plates 0 521 77973 1 Paperback £12.95 0 521 00292 3 Paperback £18.95 Cyprus, Constantinople; 14. Wall and Also available vault mosaics; 15. Opus sectile; Part II. 0 521 55364 4 Hardback £52.50 Technique and Production: 16. Craftsmen and workshops; The Creation of Modern Athens 17. Techniques and procedures; 18. The Planning the Myth repertory; 19. Architectural context and Eleni Bastéa function; 20. The patrons; Conclusions; Eleni Bastéa’s work examines the urban Maps; Glossary of ornamental patterns; development of Athens in the nineteenth General glossary. century. 2001 276 x 219 mm 404pp 47 line diagrams 2000 253 x 177 mm 300pp 73 half-tones 271 half-tones 24 colour plates 8 maps 0 521 64120 9 Hardback £52.50 0 521 00230 3 Paperback c. £25.00 Publication September 2001 Also available 0 521 46143 X Hardback £80.00

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Antiquity and its Interpreters Corpus of Mycenaean Inscriptions from Textbook Death-Ritual and Social Structure in Classical Edited by Alina Payne Knossos Volume 1: 1–1063 Antiquity University of Toronto John Chadwick Ian Morris Ann Kuttner L. Godart University of Chicago University of Pennsylvania J. T. Killen Key Themes in Ancient History and Rebekah Smick J. P. Olivier 1992 228 x 152 mm 284pp 48 line diagrams University of Toronto A. Sacconi 12 tables 0 521 37611 4 Paperback £15.95 Antiquity and its Interpreters examines how and I. A. Sakellarakis the physical and textual remains of the Corpus of Mycenaean Inscriptions from Knossos Rediscovering Antiquity ancient Romans were viewed and received 1987 305 x 245 mm 452pp Karl Weber and the Excavation of Herculaneum, by writers, artists, and cultural makers of 0 521 32022 4 Hardback £205.00 Pompeii and Stabiae Christopher Charles Parslow early modern Italy. Corpus of Mycenaean Inscriptions from Wesleyan University, Connecticut 2000 279 x 215 mm 340pp 80 half-tones Knossos 1998 253 x 177 mm 416pp 75 half-tones 0 521 59400 6 Hardback £65.00 Volume 2: 1064–4485 0 521 64664 2 Paperback £19.95 John Chadwick New in Paperback L. Godart Looking at Greek Vases J. T. Killen Edited by Tom Rasmussen Becoming Roman University of Manchester J. P. Olivier The Origins of Provincial Civilization in Gaul and Nigel Spivey A. Sacconi Greg Woolf University of Wales, Lampeter and I. A. Sakellarakis University of St Andrews, Scotland 1991 210 x 145 mm 300pp 105 half-tones Corpus of Mycenaean Inscriptions from Knossos 6 figures 1 map ‘ … a stimulating and impressive 1992 305 x 245 mm 253pp 600 line diagrams 0 521 37679 3 Paperback £15.95 achievement.’ 600 half-tones The Cambridge Archaeological Journal 0 521 32023 2 Hardback £130.00 Stanford 2000 228 x 152 mm 314pp 17 figures 3 maps Artifact and Assemblage 0 521 78982 6 Paperback £15.95 Corpus of Mycenaean Inscriptions from The Finds from a Regional Survey of the Southern Knossos Argolid, Greece Also available Volume 3: 5000–7999 0 521 41445 8 Hardback £40.00 Curtis N. Runnels John Chadwick Boston University New in Paperback University of Cambridge Daniel J. Pullen L. Godart Florida State University Ethnic Identity in Greek Antiquity J. T. Killen and Susan Langdon Jonathan M. Hall J. P. Olivier University of Missouri, Columbia A. Sacconi 1996 216 x 138 mm 490pp 136 half-tones University of Chicago 1 map and I. A. Sakellarakis ‘This is an important book. It is not the 0 8047 2065 7 Hardback £60.00 Corpus of Mycenaean Inscriptions from Knossos first study of ancient Greek ethnicity in 1998 305 x 245 mm 330pp 2999 line diagrams recent years, but it is by far the most 2999 half-tones thorough and systematic … It is a major 0 521 32024 0 Hardback £160.00 contribution to Classical studies, and a Corpus of Mycenaean Inscriptions from major challenge to the archaeology of Knossos prehistoric ethnicity.’ Volume 4: 8000–9947 and Index to Volumes I–IV Ian Morris, Cambridge Archaeological John Chadwick Journal L. Godart 2000 228 x 152 mm 246pp 27 figures J. T. Killen 0 521 78999 0 Paperback £14.95 A. Sacconi Also available and I. A. Sakellarakis 0 521 58017 X Hardback £40.00

Corpus of Mycenaean Inscriptions from Knossos 1999 305 x 245 mm 296pp 1947 line diagrams 1947 half-tones 0 521 32025 9 Hardback £160.00 Archaeology of the Americas 15

Archaeology of the The Cambridge History of the Native Peoples Journal of the Americas Ancient Mesoamerica Americas Volume 3: South America (Parts 1 and 2) Edited by Frank Salomon Editor: William R. Fowler, Jr and Stuart Schwartz Vanderbilt University Cambridge History of the Cambridge History of the Native Peoples of the Ancient Mesoamerica is the international Native Peoples of the Americas forum for the method, theory, substance 2000 228 x 152 mm 1400pp 7 half-tones and interpretation of Mesoamerican Americas 12 maps 0 521 33393 8 Hardback Set £130.00 archaeology, art history and ethnohistory. The Cambridge History of the Native Peoples The journal publishes papers chiefly of the Americas is the first comprehensive Part 1 concerned with the Pre-Columbian survey of the history of the indigenous 2000 228 x 152 mm 1056pp 7 half-tones archaeology of the Mesoamerican region, 6 maps inhabitants of the Western Hemisphere. 0 521 63075 4 Hardback £65.00 but also features articles from other The work’s combination of archaeology, disciplines including ethnohistory, anthropology, and history raises new and Part 2 historical archaeology and important questions for scholars in the 2000 228 x 152 mm 976pp 6 maps ethnoarchaeology. Topics covered include field, while also promoting a better 0 521 63076 2 Hardback £65.00 the origins of agriculture, the economic understanding of Native American history The Cambridge History of the Native Peoples base of city states and empires, political by historians and anthropologists whose of the Americas organisation from the Formative through main concerns lie elsewhere. Cambridge History of the Native Peoples of the the Early Colonial periods, the development and function of early writing, The Cambridge History of the Native Peoples Americas of the Americas 2000 228 x 152 mm 4154pp 86 line diagrams and the use of iconography to reconstruct 89 half-tones 29 tables 133 maps ancient religious beliefs and practices. Volume 1: North America (Parts 1 and 2) 0 521 79054 9 Complete Set £250.00 Edited by Bruce G. Trigger Included in 2001 will be a special section and Wilcomb E. Washburn History of the Inca Realm on Mayan Causeways. Ancient Mesoamerica publishes original research papers, Cambridge History of the Native Peoples of the Maria Rostworowski de Diez Canseco Americas theoretical articles, and substantive reports 1997 228 x 152 mm 1072pp 42 half-tones Translated by Harry B. Iceland of field research, as well as reports on 53 maps 0 521 34440 9 2 volume hardback set £95.00 Now in English, this classic work of important finds and excavations. ethnohistorical research has been both Subscriptions Part 1 influential and provocative in the field of Volume 12 in 2001: April and October 1997 228 x 152 mm 584pp 42 half-tones Andean prehistory. 28 maps Institutions print plus electronic: £107 1999 228 x 152 mm 269pp 3 line diagrams 0 521 57392 0 Hardback £60.00 Individuals print only: £43 18 half-tones 1 table 3 maps Students: £28 0 521 44266 4 Hardback £42.50 Part 2 Society for American Archaeology, Midwestern 0 521 63759 7 Paperback £15.95 Conference on Mesoamerican Archaeology & 1997 228 x 152 mm 520pp 25 maps Ethnohistory, related Latin American national 0 521 57393 9 Hardback £60.00 New in Paperback from Stanford archaeological societies: £33 ISSN 0956-5361 The Cambridge History of the Native Peoples The Voyage of the ‘Frolic’ New England Merchants and the Opium Trade of the Americas Thomas N. Layton Journal Volume 2: Mesoamerica (Parts 1 and 2) San José State University, California Part 1 Journal of Latin American Studies 1999 228 x 152 mm 246pp Edited by Richard E. W. Adams 0 8047 3849 1 Paperback £10.95 Editors: James Dunkerley and Murdo J. MacLeod Also available University of London Cambridge History of the Native Peoples of the 0 8047 2909 3 Hardback £35.00 and Laurence Whitehead Americas University of Oxford 2000 228 x 152 mm 1064pp 50 line diagrams Stanford 50 half-tones 17 tables 51 maps The Ancient Maya With over 30 years of continuous 0 521 65205 7 2 volume set (Mesoamerica) £130.00 Fifth edition publication, Journal of Latin American Robert J. Sharer Part 1 Studies presents recent research in the field University of Pennsylvania of Latin American studies in economics, 2000 228 x 152 mm 588pp 50 line diagrams 1994 224 x 152 mm 928pp 500 half-tones 50 half-tones 4 tables 26 maps 0 8047 2130 0 Hardback £60.00 geography, politics, international relations, 0 521 35165 0 Hardback £65.00 0 8047 2310 9 Paperback £21.95 sociology, , economic history and cultural history. Regular Part 2 Prehistory of the Americas features include articles on contemporary 2000 228 x 152 mm 472pp 13 tables 25 maps Second edition 0 521 65204 9 Hardback £65.00 Stuart J. Fiedel themes, specially commissioned Ebasco Environmental commentaries and an extensive section of 1992 228 x 152 mm 422pp 115 line diagrams book reviews. There is no commitment to 0 521 41532 2 Hardback £60.00 any political viewpoint or ideology. 0 521 42544 1 Paperback £21.95 Subscriptions Peruvian Prehistory Volume 33 in 2001: February, May, An Overview of Pre-Inca and Inca Society August and November Edited by Richard W. Keatinge Institutions print plus electronic: £112 Individuals print only: £49 1988 246 x 189 mm 384pp Students: £29 0 521 25560 0 Hardback £50.00 0 521 27555 5 Paperback £23.95 Society for Latin American Studies, Asociacion de Historiadores Latinamericanstas: £32 ISSN 0022-216X

Visit our website at uk.cambridge.org 16 European Archaeology

European Europe’s First Farmers Forthcoming Edited by T. Douglas Price The Making of the Slavs Archaeology University of Wisconsin, Madison History and Archaeology of the Lower With contributions by Malcolm Lillie Danube Region, c. 500–700 Forthcoming New Edition University of Hull Florin Curta The Phoenicians and the West University of Florida Politics, Colonies, and Trade This book offers a new approach to the Second edition problem of Slavic ethnicity in south-eastern Maria Eugenia Aubet Europe between c. 500 and c. 700. The Universidad Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona author shows how Byzantine authors Between the eighth and sixth centuries, ‘invented’ the Slavs, rejects the idea of the Phoenicians established the first Slavic migration, and shows that ‘the Slavs’ trading system in the Mediterranean were the product of the frontier. basin, from their homeland, in what is Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and now Lebanon, to colonies in Cyprus, Thought: Fourth Series, 52 Tunisia, Sicily, Sardinia and southern 2001 228 x 152 mm c.475pp 10 tables Spain. The Phoenician state was able to 84 figures 0 521 80202 4 Hardback c. £50.00 maintain its independence, despite the Publication July 2001 territorial expansion of the Assyrians, in return for tribute provided by its Forthcoming western colonies. Archaeological Origins of the European research over the past decades, and still Economy ongoing, has transformed our Communications and Commerce understanding of these colonies and Plants and animals originally domesticated c.700–c.900 their relationship to local communities. in the Near East arrived in Europe between Michael McCormick This updated version of Maria Eugenia 7000 and 4000 BC. Was the new Harvard University, Massachusetts Aubet’s highly praised book, The technology introduced by migrants, or was For fifty years debate has raged about Phoenicians and the West, originally it an ‘inside job’? How were the new early European commerce during the published in English in 1993, species adapted to European conditions? period between antiquity and the incorporates the most recent research What were the immediate and long-term middle ages. Was there trade? Or no findings, an expanded bibliography, and consequences of the transition from trade? If trade, in what – and with an appendix on radiometric dating. As hunting and gathering to farming? These whom? New evidence and new ways of the only English-language synthesis on central questions in the prehistory of looking at old evidence are now the Phoenicians, it will be welcomed by Europe are discussed here by leading breaking the stalemate. Analysis of scholars and students of Mediterranean specialists, drawing on the latest communications – the movements of history and archaeology, and anyone scholarship in fields as diverse as genetics people, ideas and things – is interested in early trading systems. and IndoEuropean linguistics. Detailed transforming our vision of Europe and studies document the differences between Contents: Prologue; 1. Introduction; the Mediterranean in the age of European regions, and fresh generalisations 2. Phoenicia during the Iron Age; Charlemagne and Harun al Rashid. about the origins of European agriculture 3. The bases for the expansion in the This is the first comprehensive analysis are also proposed and debated. Mediterranean; 4. Phoenician trade: of the economic transition during this exchange and organization; 5. The great Contributors: T. Douglas Price, Ruth period for over sixty years. Using new political institution: the palace and the Tringham, Marek Zvelbil, Malcolm Lille, materials and new methodology, it will temple; 6. The routes of Phoenician William K. Barnett, Didier Binder, Joao attract all social and economic historians expansion in the Mediterranean; 7. The Zilhao, Michael Joachim, Peter Bogucki, of antiquity and the middle ages, and Phoenicians in the West: chronology Peter Woodman anyone concerned with the origins of and historiography; 8. The Phoenician 2000 246 x 189 mm 412pp 14 line diagrams Europe, the history of the slave trade, colonies in the Central Mediterranean; 1 half-tone 5 tables 2 graphs 17 figures 39 maps 0 521 66203 6 Hardback £55.00 medicine and disease, cross-cultural 9. The colonies of the Far West; 10. The 0 521 66572 8 Paperback £19.95 contacts, and the Muslim and Byzantine colonies in the West; 11. Concluding worlds. thoughts; Appendix. The Archaeology of the Iberians 2001 247 x 174 mm 1064pp 17 figures 2001 228 x 152 mm 396pp 44 half-tones Culture Contact and Culture Change in Iron- 39 maps 3 tables 33 figures 33 maps Age Europe 0 521 66102 1 Hardback c. £90.00 0 521 79161 8 Hardback c. £47.50 Publication July 2001 0 521 79543 5 Paperback c. £17.95 Arturo Ruiz Publication September 2001 Universidad de Jaén, Spain and Manuel Molinos Universidad de Jaén, Spain Translated by Mary Turton A study of the Iberians, an important people in late Iron Age Europe heavily influenced by invading neighbours. 1998 228 x 152 mm 352pp 4 half-tones 5 graphs 78 figures 0 521 56402 6 Hardback £45.00 European Archaeology 17

The Cambridge Urban History of Greater Medieval Houses of The Romanization of Britain Britain England and Wales, 1300–1500 An Essay in Archaeological Interpretation Martin Millett Volume 1: c.600 – c.1540 Volume 1: Northern England 1992 247 x 174 mm 271pp Edited by D. M. Palliser Anthony Emery 0 521 42864 5 Paperback £19.95 University of Leeds Early Ireland Surveys the history of British towns from An Introduction to Irish Prehistory their post-Roman origins down to the Michael J. O’Kelly sixteenth century. University College, Cork The Cambridge Urban History of Britain, 1 1989 246 x 189 mm 392pp 0 521 33687 2 Paperback £21.95 2000 228 x 152 mm 888pp 26 half-tones 29 tables 47 figures The Churches of the Crusader Kingdom of 0 521 44461 6 Hardback £90.00 Jerusalem: A Corpus Volume 2: 1540–1840 Volume 1: A–K (excluding Acre and Jerusalem) Denys Pringle Edited by Peter Clark The Churches of the Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem University of Leicester 1992 276 x 219 mm 356pp This volume examines when, why, and 0 521 39036 2 Hardback £95.00 how Britain became the first modern urban The Churches of the Crusader Kingdom of nation. Jerusalem: A Corpus The Cambridge Urban History of Britain, 2 Volume 2: L–Z (excluding Tyre) 2000 228 x 152 mm 934pp 18 half-tones Denys Pringle 5 graphs 24 maps The Churches of the Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem 0 521 43141 7 Hardback £90.00 1998 276 x 219 mm 480pp 200 half-tones 102 figures Volume 3: 1840–1950 0 521 39037 0 Hardback £95.00 Edited by M. J. Daunton ‘This authoritative and stimulating work University of Cambridge will provide not just a stepping-stone to The Cambridge Urban History of Britain, 3 enhance understanding of these later 2001 228 x 152 mm 970pp 2 line diagrams 53 half-tones 31 tables 8 graphs 32 maps medieval houses but a landmark in 0 521 41707 4 Hardback £90.00 appreciating their social symbolism.’ Northern History 3 Volume Set Greater Medieval Houses The Cambridge Urban History of Britain 1996 276 x 219 mm 449pp 211 half-tones 2001 228 x 152 mm 2800pp 49 line diagrams 3 tables 77 figures 26 maps 97 half-tones 60 tables 13 graphs 56 maps 0 521 49723 X Hardback £85.00 0 521 80155 9 3 Volume Set £250.00 Volume 2: East Anglia, Central England and Wales Anthony Emery Greater Medieval Houses of England and Wales, the first survey of its kind for 150 years, offers an up-to-date assessment of nearly 700 houses and a synthesis of current knowledge and research. This second volume, covering central England and Wales, includes the first overview devoted solely to medieval Welsh houses. Greater Medieval Houses 2000 276 x 219 mm 740pp 384 half-tones 1 table 195 plans 0 521 58131 1 Hardback £130.00

Forthcoming Volume 3: Southern England Anthony Emery Greater Medieval Houses 2002 0 521 58132 X Hardback c. £80.00 Publication July 2002

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Asian and African The Cambridge History of Ancient Forthcoming Textbook China New Edition Archaeology From the Origins of Civilization to 221 BC Michael Loewe African Civilizations Forthcoming University of Cambridge Second edition Ancient China and its Enemies and Edward L. Shaughnessy Graham Connah The Rise of Nomadic Power in East Asian University of Chicago University of New England, Australia History The Cambridge History of Ancient China Nicola Di Cosmo provides a survey of the cultural history of University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand pre-imperial China. Fourteen leading Relations between Inner Asian nomads and specialists, both historians and Chinese are a continuous theme archeologists, cover the Shang, Western throughout Chinese history. By Zhou, Spring and Autumn, and Warring investigating the formation of nomadic States periods, the Neolithic background, cultures, by analyzing the evolution of language, intellectual history, relations with patterns of interaction along China’s Central Asia, and the debts of both the northern frontiers, and by exploring how Qin and Han empires to these earlier time- this interaction was recorded in early periods. There are chapters on institutional Chinese historiography, this book explores history, based on both traditional and the origins of the cultural and political palaeographic literature, and on material tensions between these two civilizations culture, based on archaeological evidence. through the first millennium BC. The 1999 228 x 152 mm 1180pp 144 line diagrams main purpose of the book is to analyze 78 half-tones 18 tables ethnic, cultural, and political frontiers 0 521 47030 7 Hardback £85.00 between nomads and Chinese in the New in Paperback This major new edition of African historical contexts that led to their The Cambridge History of formation, and to look at cultural Civilizations re-examines the physical perceptions of ‘others’ as a function of the Southeast Asia evidence for developing social same historical process. Based on both Volume 1 complexity in tropical Africa over the Part 1: From Early Times to c.1500 archaeological and textual sources, this last four thousand years. Graham Edited by Nicholas Tarling book also introduces a new methodological Connah focuses upon the archaeological University of Auckland approach to Chinese frontier history, which research of two key aspects of combines extensive factual data with a In these four volumes, now published in complexity, urbanism and state careful scrutiny of the motives, methods, paperback, twenty-two scholars of formation, in seven main areas of Africa: and general conception of history that international reputation consider the whole Nubia, Ethiopia, the West African informed the Chinese historian Ssu-ma of mainland and island Southeast Asia savanna, the West African forest, the Ch’ien. from Burma to Indonesia. Volume 1 charts East African coast and islands, the 2001 228 x 152 mm 328pp 5 maps Southeast Asia’s beginnings, from Zimbabwe Plateau, and parts of Central 0 521 77064 5 Hardback £45.00 prehistory to c. 1500. Africa. The book’s main concern is to Publication October 2001 2000 228 x 152 mm 384pp 9 maps review the available evidence in its 0 521 66369 5 Paperback £13.95 varied environmental setting, and to consider possible explanations of the developments that gave rise to it. Extensively illustrated, including new maps and plans, and offering an extended bibliography, this book provides essential reading for students of archaeology, anthropology, African history, black studies, and social geography. 2001 247 x 174 mm 339pp 42 line diagrams 17 half-tones 75 figures 18 maps 0 521 59309 3 Hardback £45.00 0 521 59690 4 Paperback £15.95 Publication April 2001 Also of Interest 19

Forthcoming The Cambridge History of Egypt Journal Kalambo Falls Prehistoric Site Volume 1: 641–1517 Bulletin of the School of Oriental Edited by Carl F. Petry Volume 3: The Earlier Cultures: Middle and Northwestern University, Illinois and African Studies Earlier Stone Age Cambridge History of Egypt Editors: T. H. Barrett and G. R. Hawting Edited by J. Desmond Clark 1998 228 x 152 mm 672pp 10 half-tones School of Oriental and African Studies University of California, Berkeley 4 maps 0 521 47137 0 Hardback £85.00 Published for the School of Oriental and African Studies, UK Journal The Bulletin of the School of Oriental and The China Quarterly African Studies is the leading Editor: Richard Louis Edmonds interdisciplinary journal of Asia, Africa and School of Oriental and African Studies the Near and Middle East. It carries Published for the School of Oriental and unparalleled studies of the languages, African Studies, UK cultures and civilisations of these regions from ancient times to the present. The China Quarterly is the leading Publishing articles, review articles, notes scholarly journal in its field, covering all and communications of the highest aspects of contemporary China including academic standard, it also features an Taiwan and overseas Chinese. Its extensive and influential reviews section interdisciplinary approach covers a range of and an annual index. subjects including anthropology/sociology, Subscriptions art, business/economics, geography, history, Volume 64 in 2001: February, June international affairs, law, literature, and and October politics. Edited to rigorous standards the Institutions print plus electronic: £100 Individuals print only: £45 journal publishes high-quality, authoritative SOAS copies: £50 research, keeping readers up to date with : £32 events in China. International in readership ISSN 0041-977X The local basin in the Kalambo River and scholarship, The China Quarterly valley above the famous Falls on the provides readers with historical boundary between Zambia and perspectives, in-depth analyses, and a Also of Interest Tanzania provides one of the longest deeper understanding of China and the and richest records of man’s activity so Chinese. It has a comprehensive Book Fractography far recovered from a single site in the Review section, an annual special issue and African continent. Successive human Observing, Measuring and Interpreting the Quarterly Chronicle, which keeps Fracture Surface Topography occupation levels and horizons cover the readers informed of events in China. The last 60,000 years from the close of the Derek Hull special issue in 2001 will consider Taiwan University of Liverpool Acheulian Industrial Complex to the in the twentieth century. present day. The site is unique in that, Subscriptions The study of fracture surfaces has besides very rich and representative Volumes 165–168 in 2001: March, numerous applications in a range of series of cultural finds, wood, other June, September and December materials, and is particularly relevant in vegetable remains, charcoals, and Institutions print plus electronic: £80 materials science. This book describes ways Individuals print only: £39 pollens have been preserved, often in Students: £20 of studying the surface topography using a association with undisturbed, prehistoric ISSN 0009-4439 wide range of techniques, and the camping places. The final volume of this interpretation of the topographical features. major site report, which deals with the 1999 253 x 203 mm 384pp 320 line diagrams Middle and Earlier Stone Age period 245 half-tones 0 521 64082 2 Hardback £80.00 completes the project, initiated with the 0 521 64684 7 Paperback £28.95 publication of Volume I (1969) on the geology, palaeoecology and detailed The Diatoms stratigraphy of the excavations, and Applications for the Environmental and Volume II (1974) on the later Earth Sciences Prehistoric Cultures. Edited by Eugene F. Stoermer • Final volume of Kalambo Falls University of Michigan, Ann Arbor prehistoric site, to complete a and John P. Smol mammoth press publication Queen’s University, Ontario • Desmond Clark, editor, and author of Applications to environmental and much of the text, is one of the most industrial challenges are covered in this famous archaeologists of the twentieth wide-ranging and timely review of using century diatoms as tools. This rapidly expanding Clark: Kalambo Falls Prehistoric Site field has applications particularly to 2001 276 x 219 mm 784pp 26 half-tones ecological problems such as climate change, 108 tables 262 figures acidification and eutrophication, as well as 0 521 20071 7 Hardback c. £250.00 industrial and commercial uses. Publication May 2001 1999 247 x 174 mm 482pp 84 line diagrams 3 half-tones 12 tables 0 521 58281 4 Hardback £80.00

Visit our website at uk.cambridge.org 20 Social and Cultural Anthropology Anthropology Highlights

Forthcoming Textbook Grimshaw’s exploration of the role of vision within modern anthropology engages with current debates about ocularcentism, investigating the relationship between vision and The Ethnographer’s Eye knowledge in ethnographic enquiry. Using John Berger’s notion of ‘ways of seeing’, the Ways of Seeing in Modern Anthropology author argues that vision operates differently as a technique and theory of knowledge within Anna Grimshaw the discipline. In the first part of the book she examines contrasting visions at work in the University of Manchester so-called classical British school, reassessing the legacy of Rivers, Malinowski and Radcliffe- Brown through the lens of early modern art and cinema. In the second part of the book, the changing relationship between vision and knowledge is explored through the anthropology of , David and Judith MacDougall, and Melissa Llewelyn-Davies. Vision is foregrounded in the work of these contemporary ethnographers, focusing more general questions about technique and epistemology whether image-based media are used or not in ethnographic enquiry.

Contents: Part I. Visualizing Anthropology: The Modernist Moment and After, 1895–1945: 1. Anxious visions: rivers, cubism and anthropological modernism; 2. The innocent eye: Flaherty, Malinowski and the romantic quest; 3. The light of reason: Grierson, Radcliffe-Brown and the Enlightenment project; Part II. Anthropological Visions: Cinema and Anthropology in the Postwar World: 4. The anthropological cinema of Jean Rouch; 5. The anthropological cinema of David and Judith MacDougall; 6. The anthropological television of Melissa Llewelyn-Davies.

2001 228 x 152 mm 224pp 0 521 77310 5 Hardback £37.50 0 521 77475 6 Paperback £13.95 Publication June 2001

Forthcoming Do people everywhere have the same, or even compatible, ideas about multiculturalism, indigenous rights or women’s rights? The authors of this book move beyond the traditional Culture and Rights terms of the universalism versus cultural relativism debate. Through detailed case-studies Anthropological Perspectives from around the world (Hawa’i, France, Thailand, Botswana, Greece, Nepal and Canada) Edited by Jane K. Cowan they explore the concrete effects of rights talk and rights institutions on people’s lives. University of Sussex Marie Bénédicte Dembour Contents: 1. Introduction; Part I. Setting Universal Rights: 2. Changing rights, University of Sussex changing culture Sally Engle Merry; 3. Following the movement of a pendulum: between and Richard Wilson universalism and relativism Marie-Bénédicte Dembour; 4. Imposing rights? – a case study University of Sussex of child prostitution in Thailand Heather Montgomery; 5. Gendering culture: towards a plural perspective of Kwena women’s rights Anne Griffiths; 6. Between universalism and relativism: a critique of the UNESCO concept of culture Thomas Hylland Eriksen; Part II. Claiming Cultural Rights: 7. Ambiguities of an emancipatory discourse: The making of a Macedonian minority in Greece Jane K. Cowan; 8. From cultural rights to individual rights and back: Nepalese struggles over culture and identity David Gellner; 9. Advancing indigenous claims through the law: Reflections on the Guatemalan peace process Rachel Sieder and Jessica Witchell; 10. Rights as the reward for simulated cultural sameness: the Innu in the Canadian colonial context Colin Samson.

2001 228 x 152 mm 271pp 0 521 79339 4 Hardback c. £40.00 0 521 79735 7 Paperback c. £14.95 Publication August 2001 Social and Cultural Anthropology 21

Social and Cultural Contents: Foreword Beatrice Medicine; Forthcoming Anthropology Introduction: foragers and others The Politics of Race, Ethnicity, and Richard B. Lee and Richard Daly; Part I. Language in National Censuses Ethnographies: I.I North America; I.II Edited by David Kertzer The Cambridge Encyclopedia of South America; I.III North Eurasia; I.IV Brown University, Rhode Island Hunters and Gatherers Africa; I.V South Asia; I.VI SouthEast and Dominique Arel Edited by Richard B. Lee Asia; I.VII Australia; Part II. Special Brown University, Rhode Island Topic Essays: II.I Hunter-gatherers, University of Toronto Census and Identity examines the ways and Richard Daly History and Social Theory; II.II Facets of hunter-gatherer life in cross cultural that states have attempted to pigeon-hole perspective; II.III Hunter-gatherers in a the people within their boundaries into global world. racial, ethnic, and language categories. These attempts, whether through American • Comprehensive coverage of 7 world efforts to divide the US population into regions: North and South America, mutually exclusive racial categories, or Africa, North, South and Southeast through the Soviet system of inscribing Asia, and Australia nationality categories on internal passports, • Authors including many of the world’s have important implications not only for leading experts in the field of hunter- people’s own identities and life chances, gatherer studies but for national political and social • Culturally sensitive authors who processes as well. The book reviews the combine careful scholarship with ethical history of these categorizing efforts by the responsibility and advocacy for state, and offer a theoretical context for indigenous rights examining them, and illustrates the case 1999 246 x 189 mm 531pp 122 half-tones with studies from a range of countries. 16 maps New Perspectives on Anthropological and 0 521 57109 X Hardback £80.00 Social Demography 2001 228 x 152 mm 250pp Hunting and gathering is humanity’s Forthcoming 0 521 80823 5 Hardback c. £37.50 0 521 00427 6 Paperback c. £13.95 first and most successful adaptation, Edmund Leach Publication October 2001 occupying fully 90 per cent of human An Anthropological Life history. Until 12,000 years ago all Stanley Tambiah New from Stanford humanity lived this way. Surprisingly, in Harvard University, Massachusetts Second Edition an increasingly urbanized and This book is primarily an intellectual The Evolution of Human Societies technological world dozens of hunting biography of Edmund Leach and gathering societies have persisted From Foraging Group to Agrarian State (1910–1989), one of Britain’s foremost Second edition and thrive on five continents. Case social and cultural anthropologists, studies of over fifty of the world’s Allen W. Johnson whose versatility, originality and range University of California, Los Angeles hunting and gathering peoples, written of writing is difficult to match among by leading experts, tell a story of and Timothy Earle the anthropologists of the English Northwestern University resilience in the face of change, of speaking world. His substantial ancient ways now combined with the contributions to knowledge have dealt This ambitious work seeks to describe and trappings of modernity. Divided into with kinship and social organization, explain the growth in complexity of human seven world regions, each section hill tribes and valley peoples; and tenure societies. Its emphasis is on the causes, includes a regional introduction and an and peasant economy; aesthetics; British mechanisms, and patterns of cultural archaeological overview. Thematic essays structural-functional method and the evolution, which the authors explain in discuss prehistory, social life, gender, structuralism of Levi-Strauss; biblical terms of a coherent theory of the political music and art, health, religion and narratives and the myths of Classical economy. The authors show that the indigenous knowledge. The final section Greece. Leach was not wedded to any interconnected processes of technological surveys the complex histories of hunter- settled orthodoxy, and what made his change and population growth are the gatherers’ encounters with colonialism writings exciting was his motor of social change, resulting in three and the State, and their ongoing experimentation with new ideas, and his related processes – intensification, struggles for dignity and human rights expansions of the horizons of the integration, and stratification – that as part of the worldwide movement of discipline. He had a distinctive view of transform human societies over time. The indigenous peoples. the comparative method, which validity of their theory rests on evidence • Comprehensive coverage of 7 world discarding and transcending the stale drawn from 19 case studies that range regions: North and South America, dichotomy of the ‘primitive’ versus the widely over time and space. For this new Africa, North, South and Southeast ‘modern’, saw a dialectic between ‘us edition, the authors have thoroughly Asia, and Australia modern’ and ‘them primitives’ as rewritten the theoretical argument for greater clarity, updated the case materials to • Authors including many of the world’s transformations of one another incorporate new research, and added a new leading experts in the field of hunter- illuminating common human chapter that applies their theoretical gatherer studies propensities and capacities. 2001 228 x 152 mm 300pp 5 half-tones perspective to the problems of change since • Culturally sensitive authors who 1 figure the industrial revolution and the combine careful scholarship with ethical 0 521 80824 3 Hardback c. £40.00 globalization of trade and political responsibility and advocacy for Publication November 2001 influence. indigenous rights

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Reviews of the First Edition Stanford A World of Babies ‘In a book full of perceptive observations Contingent Countryside Imagined Childcare Guides for Seven and persuasive arguments … Johnson and Settlement, Economy, and Land Use in the Societies Earle show in masterly detail how societies Southern Argolid since 1700 Edited by Judy S. DeLoache articulate to their environments and … Edited by Susan Buck Sutton University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign how they evolve.’ Indiana University and Purdue University, Indiana and Alma Gottlieb Ethnohistory University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign 2001 228 x 152 mm 456pp 11 line diagrams 9 tables 3 graphs 0 8047 4031 3 Hardback £37.50 0 8047 4032 1 Paperback £15.95 Publication March 2001

Forthcoming from Stanford The Burden of Time Photographs from the Highlands of Chiapas Marcey Jacobson This book reproduces some 75 extraordinary photographs by Marcey Jacobson of the indigenous Maya and non-indigenous Latino peoples of San Cristóbal de las Casas in the highlands of Chiapas, Mexico. Largely taken This volume examines how residents of during the 1960s and 1970s, these Greece’s southern Argolid have attempted stunning and historically revealing to shelter, feed, and advance their Are babies divine, or do they have the photographs depict the daily life and economic situation over the last three devil in them? Should parents talk to celebrations of the local population – centuries. Ethnographic, geographic, their infants, or is it a waste of time? selling goods in street markets, historical, and archaeological Answers to questions about the nature participating in religious rituals, begging methodologies are integrated to yield an and nurture of infants appear in this in town squares, and a myriad of other image of the southern Argolid as a book as advice to parents in seven world activities. They offer a sensitive, contingent countryside whose boundaries societies. Imagine what Dr Spock might respectful, and honest portrait of a have been constantly reconfigured. have written if he were a healer from region increasingly under pressure from ‘Within the disciplines of classics and the Bali … or an Aboriginal grandmother the disruptive forces of modernization archeology and cultural anthropology of from the Australian desert … or a and political change. Jacobson’s Greece, this book is of central importance diviner from a rural village in West photographs tack back and forth for two reasons. First, the authors present Africa. As the seven childcare ‘manuals’ through people’s lives to explore the valuable documentation and intelligent in this book reveal, experts worldwide encumbrances and joys of the passage of discussion of a relatively neglected period offer intriguingly different advice to new time. of Greek history. Second, the Argolid parents. The creative format of this Exploration Project is the father and long- book brings alive a rich fund of ‘As a photographer, I view Jacobson’s awaited exemplar of a generation of writing ethnographic knowledge, vividly work as a remarkably comprehensive by historians, classicists, and archaeologists illustrating a simple but powerful truth: unveiling of a culture that is largely on regional and rural studies of Greece. there exist many models of babyhood, hidden from view. It is astute work, the These essays also transcend their particular each shaped by deeply held values and product of years of intelligent field of interest by providing critical new widely varying cultural contexts. After concentration. Her photographs perspectives on the ways in which reading this book, you will never again accomplish something quite rare – she historians and archaeologists have view child rearing as a matter of reveals significant detail in a way that is envisioned the past and by presenting new ‘common sense’. unstylized, unselfconscious, and data for examining the relationship ‘A World of Babies is a witty, charming, unspectacular. By this, I mean that she between the present and the past.’ and yet thoughtful and informative relies on her subjects to depict L. Vance Watrous, State University of New book that … is … for anyone who has themselves, rather than attempting to York, Buffalo place them in some sort of artistic 2000 228 x 152 mm 406pp 38 half-tones ever wondered if babies are raised the context. She subtly blends anthropology 6 maps same everywhere. A World of Babies, and art.’ 0 8047 3315 5 Hardback £60.00 with its seven truth-filled fictional Joel Leivick, Stanford University manuals on child-rearing from different parts of the world, gently persuades us 2001 276 x 219 mm 160pp 100 half-tones 0 8047 3877 7 Hardback £27.50 that bringing a new person into Publication August 2001 existence is always a question of culture and history.’ Ruth Behar, University of Michigan Social and Cultural Anthropology 23

Contents: Foreword Jerome Bruner; 1. If Forthcoming Textbook Dr Spock were born in Bali: raising a Explaining Human Origins An Introduction to Theory in world of babies Judy S. DeLoache and Wiktor Stoczkowski Anthropology Alma Gottlieb; 2. A parenting manual Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique Robert Layton with words of advice for Puritan (CNRS), Paris University of Durham mothers Debbie Reese; 3. Luring your Translated by Mary Turton child into this life: a Beng path for This clear and concise introduction to Wiktor Stoczkowski, a infant care Alma Gottlieb; 4. Baby and anthropological theory, written for palaeoanthropologist, argues that the child care in Bali Marissa Diener; 5. undergraduate students, reviews the ideas theories of human origins developed by Making babies in a Turkish village Carol that have inspired anthropologists in their archaeologists and physical Delaney; 6. Infants of the dreaming: a studies of societies around the world. It anthropologists from the early Warlpiri guide to child care Sophia L. describes the key theories, past and present, nineteenth century to the present day Pierroutsakos; 7. The view from the tracing the way in which they have been are structurally similar to Western folk Wuro: a guide to childrearing for Fulani translated into anthropological debates. theories, and to the speculations of parents Michelle C. Johnson; 8. Never ‘In a concise, readable book, Layton has earlier philosophers. Reviewing a leave your little one alone: raising an produced a theoretical guide that will find remarkable range of thinkers writing in Ifaluk child Huynh-Nhu Le. itself a ready audience almost immediately. a variety of European languages, he 2000 228 x 152 mm 296pp 4 line diagrams This book will make a significant addition 18 half-tones 1 map makes a convincing argument for this to an already full shelf of good 0 521 66264 8 Hardback £32.50 case. Even though the book criticises the introductory texts on anthropology, and 0 521 66475 6 Paperback £10.95 lack of development in theories of frankly it is the text that many might crave human origins, it concludes on an for archaeological theory.’ Abandoned Children optimistic conclusion about the power Antiquity of the scientific approach to deliver Edited by Catherine Panter-Brick Contents: 1. The idea of a social system; 2. University of Durham more reliable theories – but only if it is conscious of the baggage it carries over Functionalism; 3. Structuralism; 4. and Malcolm T. Smith Interactionist theory; 5. Marxist University of Durham from popular discourse. 2001 228 x 152 mm 216pp 17 half-tones anthropology, 6. Socioecology; 7. 0 521 65134 4 Hardback c. £40.00 Postmodernism and anthropology. 0 521 65730 X Paperback c. £14.95 1998 228 x 152 mm 253pp 23 figures Publication November 2001 0 521 62018 X Hardback £40.00 0 521 62982 9 Paperback £14.95

Textbook Textbook History and Theory in Social Change in Melanesia Anthropology Development and History Alan Barnard Paul Sillitoe University of Edinburgh University of Durham Alan Barnard’s balanced and judicious overview of anthropological theory covering the historical contexts of the great debates, tracing the genealogies of theories and schools of thought. It discusses evolutionism; diffusionism and culture area theories, functionalism and structural-functionalism; Attempts to show that the presentations of action-centred theories; processual and ‘abandoned’ children tend to take for Marxist perspectives; relativism, granted ethnocentric ideas about what structuralism and post-structuralism; children can and should do, and what their interpretivism and postmodernism. relationship should be with adults. The Contents: 1. Visions of anthropology; range of historical and ethnographic case 2. Precursors of the anthropological studies illustrate the need to contextualise tradition; 3. Changing perspectives on their position in particular cultural evolution; 4. Diffusionist and culture-area situations. theories; 5. Functionalism and structural Contributors: Judith Ennew, Catherine functionalism; 6. Action-centred, processual Panter-Brick, Isabel dos Guimaraes Sa, and Marxist perspectives; 7. From relativism A clear introductory account of social David I. Kertzer, Malcolm T. Smith, Pier to cognitive science; 8. Structuralism, from change in Melanesia covering the colonial Paulo Viazzo, Maria Bortolotto, Andre linguistics to anthropology; and post-colonial eras. Topics include Zanotto, Eftihia Voutira, Aigli Bourskou, 9. Poststructuralists, feminists and (other) economic and technological change, Helen Charnley, Angela Veale, Max Taylor, mavericks; 10. Interpretive and urbanisation, development of the modern Carol Linehan, Tobias Hecht, Rachel postmodernist approaches; 11. Conclusions; state, the often violent reactions to these Baker, Heather Montgomery, Rachel Appendix 1: Dates of birth and death of dramatic transformations, and dilemmas of Hinton, Mia Flores-Borquez individuals mentioned in the text; development that threaten the 2000 228 x 152 mm 248pp 8 tables 13 graphs Appendix 2: Glossary. environment. For students and general 0 521 77276 1 Hardback £37.50 2000 228 x 152 mm 256pp 10 tables 12 figures readers. 0 521 77555 8 Paperback £13.95 0 521 77333 4 Hardback £37.50 0 521 77432 2 Paperback £13.95

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Contents: Preface; 1. Change and Emerging Class in Papua New New in Paperback development; 2. The arrival of Europeans; 3. Another history; 4. Technological change Guinea Games against Nature The Telling of Difference and economic growth; 5. Land rights and An Eco-Cultural History of the Nunu of Equatorial Africa community; 6. Business big men as Deborah B. Gewertz Amherst College, Massachusetts entrepreneurs; 7. From tribespeople to Robert Harms Yale University, Connecticut peasants; 8. Mining, misunderstanding, and Frederick K. Errington Trinity College, Connecticut and insurrection; 9. Forestry and local Robert Harms explores nature and culture knowledge; 10. Migration and Class has become a feature of life in Papua in the story of the Nunu, who live in and urbanisation; 11. Cargo cults and New Guinea, evident in both ‘traditional’ around the swampy floodplains of the Zaire millennial politics; 12. Missionaries and and ‘modern’ settings. This book examines River. Increasing population impinged upon social change; 13. From tribal to state the emergence of class differences and its the limits of available resources in the late politics; 14. Custom and identity. social and cultural ramifications in Wewak, eighteenth century, eventually resulting in 2000 228 x 152 mm 284pp 56 half-tones capital of the East Sepik Province, and civil war in the 1960s. 2 figures 14 maps movingly conveys the injuries of class Studies in Environment and History 0 521 77141 2 Hardback £42.50 inequalities. 2000 228 x 152 mm 296pp 1 line diagram 0 521 77806 9 Paperback £15.95 1999 228 x 152 mm 190pp 12 half-tones 1 map 10 maps 0 521 65212 X Hardback £40.00 0 521 65535 8 Paperback £15.95 Textbook 0 521 65567 6 Paperback £14.95 An Introduction to the Obliged to be Difficult Anthropology of Melanesia Cultures of Relatedness Nugget Coombs’ Legacy in Indigenous Culture and Tradition New Approaches to the Study of Kinship Affairs Paul Sillitoe Edited by Janet Carsten Tim Rowse University of Durham University of Edinburgh University of Sydney Anthropologists discuss changing ideas of Since the 1967 constitutional referendum, relatedness, transformed by radical changes Australian governments have moved in marriage arrangements, gender relations towards policies of indigenous self- and new reproductive technologies. We can determination. This book presents the no longer assume that fundamental social central issue of self-determination, as seen relationships are grounded in ‘biology’ or by Dr H. C. Coombs: through what ‘nature’, and this brings into question political mechanisms will indigenous received wisdom at the heart of the study Australians find their own voice? of kinship. ‘Rowse has produced the first Contributors: Janet Carsten, Charles comprehensive political history of the Stafford, Sharon Elaine Hutchinson, Helen federal administration of indigenous affairs Lambert, Rita Astuti, Karen Middleton, in late twentieth-century Australia … for Barbara Bodenhorn, Jeanette Edwards, those interested in his innovative approach Marilyn Strathern, Mary Bouquet to governance, Obliged to be Difficult is an 2000 228 x 152 mm 225pp 3 half-tones essential work.’ 2 figures Times Literary Supplement 0 521 65193 X Hardback £37.50 2000 228 x 152 mm 262pp 0 521 65627 3 Paperback £13.95 Many of the most important theoretical 0 521 77353 9 Hardback £45.00 0 521 77410 1 Paperback £16.95 contributions to anthropology were first Separation and Reunion in formulated with reference to Melanesian studies. An Introduction to the Anthropology Modern China Language and Solitude of Melanesia is intended for undergraduate Charles Stafford Wittgenstein, Malinowski and the Habsburg students with some grounding in the issues London School of Economics and Political Science Dilemma and ideas that inform the discipline. ‘I was charmed by the beautifully observed Ernest Gellner Edited by David Gellner Contents: 1. Introduction to Melanesia; homely scenes which Stafford uses so 2. Food gathering, fishing, and hunting in effectively as vehicles for his arguments. Foreword by Steven Lukes the Fly estuary; 3. Swidden cultivation in The intimate vignettes of family life and ‘… at once a synoptic interpretation of the the Bismarck Range; 4. Socialisation in the relations, the vivid portrayal of the often thought of Wittgenstein and Malinowski; a Admiralty Islands; 5. Exchange cycles in very unfamiliar ways in which intimacy comparative assessment of their world- the Massim Archipelago; 6. Sociopolitical and affection are expressed, are telling, views – of their accounts of knowledge, exchange in the Southern Highlands; 7. Big often delightful or affecting – and alas language and culture; a brilliant men on Bougainville Island; 8. Technology uncommon in Chinese ethnography today. sociological sketch of the common socio- in the highlands fringe; 9. Gender relations This is a work I shall gladly use to political and intellectual background which in the Western Highlands; 10. Dispute introduce my undergraduates to they shared; a view of their influence upon settlement around the Paniai lakes; 11. Sorcery contemporary China in a way that will their respective disciplines; and a passionate on Dobu Island; 12. Warfare and cannibalism capture their attention without simplifying and polemical argument with them and in the Balim region; 13. Initiation rites on its complexity.’ some of their successors, in which Gellner the Sepik river; 14. Ancestors and illness in Francesca Bray University of California, once more and for the last time eloquently the shadow of the Owen Stanley Range; Santa Barbara and succinctly expresses his own world view.’ 15. Myth in the Star mountains. 2000 228 x 152 mm 210pp 0 521 78017 9 Hardback £40.00 Steven Lukes 1998 228 x 152 mm 280pp 60 half-tones 0 521 78434 4 Paperback £14.95 1998 228 x 152 mm 228pp 6 tables 11 figures 15 maps 0 521 63002 9 Hardback £40.00 0 521 58186 9 Hardback £42.50 0 521 63997 2 Paperback £14.95 0 521 58836 7 Paperback £15.95 Social and Cultural Anthropology 25

Critical Comparisons in Politics Stanford The Worlds of Japanese Popular Culture and Culture Defacement Gender, Shifting Boundaries and Global Cultures Edited by Dolores Martinez Edited by John Bowen Public Secrecy and the Labor of the Contemporary Japanese Society Washington University, St. Louis Negative 1998 228 x 152 mm 228pp 1 line diagram and Roger Petersen Michael Taussig 1 table Washington University, St. Louis Columbia University, New York 0 521 63128 9 Hardback £42.50 0 521 63729 5 Paperback £15.95 This will be an excellent case book for courses Juxtaposing the violation of monuments, on comparison across the social sciences. In newspaper accounts of transgressions, and Healing Dramas and Clinical Plots it, leading anthropologists and political secrecy in Franco’s Spain, this study of The Narrative Structure of Experience scientists, representing various theoretical taboo and transgression, and truth’s Cheryl Mattingly paradoxical need for secrecy, elaborates 1998 228 x 152 mm 206pp positions, debate the problem of comparison, 0 521 63994 8 Paperback £16.95 criticise conventional forms of comparative Benjamin’s notion that ‘truth is not a method, and introduce comparative matter of exposure which destroys the Anthropological Studies of Religion strategies, ranging from abstract model secret, but a revelation which does justice An Introductory Text building to ethnographically based methods. to it’. Brian Morris 1999 216 x 138 mm 326pp 4 half-tones 1987 228 x 152 mm 384pp 1 line diagram Contributors: John R. Bowen, Roger 0 8047 3199 3 Hardback £40.00 3 tables Petersen, David D. Laitin, Fredrik Barth, 0 8047 3200 0 Paperback £13.95 0 521 33991 X Paperback £14.95 Greg Urban, Miriam A. Golden, Margaret The Traveller-Gypsies Levi, Allen Johnson, Barbara Geddes The Social Life of Things Commodities in Cultural Perspective Judith Okely 1999 228 x 152 mm 276pp 8 figures 0 521 65301 0 Hardback £45.00 Edited by Arjun Appadurai Changing Culture Series 0 521 65379 7 Paperback £16.95 1988 228 x 152 mm 352pp 1983 216 x 138 mm 272pp 0 521 35726 8 Paperback £15.95 0 521 28870 3 Paperback £18.95 Stanford Tales of the City The Scramble for Art in Central Africa An Anthropology for A Study of Narrative and Urban Life Edited by Enid Schildkrout Contemporaneous Worlds Ruth Finnegan and Curtis Keim 1998 228 x 152 mm 226pp 10 half-tones 1998 228 x 152 mm 271pp 29 half-tones Marc Augé 4 maps 0 521 58349 7 Hardback £45.00 Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Paris 0 521 62334 0 Hardback £45.00 0 521 58678 X Paperback £16.95 Translated by Amy Jacobs 0 521 62623 4 Paperback £16.95 Double Vision The author argues that social anthropology Kinship and Marriage Art Histories and Colonial Histories in the Pacific is fully capable of adapting to the An Anthropological Perspective Edited by Nicholas Thomas accelerated change that is continuously Robin Fox and Diane Losche 1996 184 x 124 mm 278pp 71 figures recomposing relations between 1999 247 x 174 mm 302pp 50 half-tones 0 521 27823 6 Paperback £13.95 0 521 64341 4 Hardback £45.00 universalism and particularisms. It is for 0 521 65998 1 Paperback £16.95 social anthropology to select, analyze, and Property Relations understand the new modes of sociality and Renewing the Anthropological Tradition Stanford Edited by C. M. Hann the new spaces in which these new Golden Arches East 1998 228 x 152 mm 287pp recompositions manifest themselves. McDonald’s in East Asia 0 521 59389 1 Hardback £47.50 Edited by James L. Watson 0 521 59636 X Paperback £17.95 Mestizo Spaces/Espaces Metisses 1998 216 x 138 mm 276pp 1999 216 x 138 mm 160pp Cambridge and the Torres Strait 0 8047 3205 1 Hardback £35.00 0 8047 3474 7 Hardback £29.95 0 8047 3207 8 Paperback £12.95 Centenary Essays on the 1898 Anthropological 0 8047 3475 5 Paperback £11.95 Expedition Border Identities Edited by Anita Herle Questions of Competence Nation and State at International Frontiers and Sandra Rouse Edited by Thomas M. Wilson Culture, Classification and Intellectual 1998 246 x 189 mm 268pp 71 half-tones and Hastings Donnan Disability 6 maps 0 521 58461 2 Hardback £40.00 1998 228 x 152 mm 313pp 1 table 11 maps Edited by Richard Jenkins 0 521 58315 2 Hardback £47.50 University of Sheffield 0 521 58745 X Paperback £17.95 Speak of the Devil This book advances a conceptualisation of Tales of Satanic Abuse in Contemporary England intellectual disability that emphasises its Jean La Fontaine cultural variability and social construction 1998 228 x 152 mm 236pp 0 521 62934 9 Paperback £17.95 rather than its medicalised, physiological nature. Addressed to disability specialists in The the social sciences and medicine, it treats Second edition intellectual disability not just as a property Robert Layton of individuals, but also as social 1991 228 x 152 mm 272pp 50 line diagrams 23 half-tones phenomenon. 0 521 36894 4 Paperback £16.95 Contributors: Richard Jenkins, Michael V. Stanford Angrosino, Patrick J. Devlieger, Tim The Street is My Home Booth, Wendy Booth, Charlotte Aull Youth and Violence in Caracas Davies, Sylvia van Maastricht, Susan Patricia C. Marquez Reynolds Whyte, Mark Nuttall, Nancy 1999 292pp 7 half-tones Lundgren 0 8047 3453 4 Hardback £35.00 1999 228 x 152 mm 260pp 0 521 62303 0 Hardback £47.50 0 521 62662 5 Paperback £17.95

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Journal This is the most comprehensive book on ‘Invoking concepts from fields as diverse as Javanese religion since Geertz’s famous speech-acts theory and cybernetics, Social Anthropology study of 1960. Rappaport constructs one of the fullest and Editor: Eduardo P. Archetti ‘Andrew Beatty’s ethnographic eye is richest theories of ritual to be found … University of Oslo, Norway wonderfully balanced, and he manages Roy Rappaport writes with both clarity and Published for the European Association of better than any book since The Religion of passion … the grandeur of Rappaport’s Social Anthropologists Java to capture the social texture and moral effort to demonstrate the centrality of Social Anthropology is an international tenor of different varieties of Javanese ritual and of religion is most impressive.’ journal that serves the needs of all scholars religion … [This] is an outstanding work Times Literary Supplement with an interest in social anthropology. Not of anthropological scholarship.’ Cambridge Studies in Social and Cultural only does it publish some of the best Robert Hefner, Boston University Anthropology, 110 scholarship available, but it acts as a forum 1999 228 x 152 mm 562pp ‘ … fascinating study of religious diversity 0 521 22873 5 Hardback £47.50 for debate about key issues and concepts in in Java’s easternmost region of Banyuwangi 0 521 29690 0 Paperback £17.95 the field, challenging and re-examining the …’ boundaries of the discipline. As well as Benjamin Zimmer, In Brief Anthropology Benda Prize Winner original research articles, the journal Cambridge Studies in Social and Cultural Power and Intimacy in the includes critical notes and a substantial Anthropology, 111 Christian Philippines book review section. 1999 228 x 152 mm 292pp 6 half-tones Fenella Cannell Subscriptions 0 521 62444 4 Hardback £45.00 London School of Economics and Political Science Volume 9 in 2001: February, June 0 521 62473 8 Paperback £16.95 and October ‘This ethnography by Fenella Cannell is a Institutions print plus electronic: £76 Ritual and Religion in the Making well-written, well-presented, finely crafted Individuals print only: £39 Special arrangements exist for members of European of Humanity piece of work.’ Association of Social Anthropologists Roy A. Rappaport The Journal of Asian Studies ISSN 0964-0282 Cambridge Studies in Social and Cultural Anthropology, 109 Cambridge Studies in 1999 228 x 152 mm 342pp 10 half-tones 5 figures 1 map Social and Cultural 0 521 64147 0 Hardback £45.00 Anthropology 0 521 64622 7 Paperback £16.95 Series Editors: Ernest Gellner The Trading Crowd Jack Goody An Ethnography of the Shanghai Stock Market Ellen Hertz Stephen Gudeman Cambridge Studies in Social and Cultural Michael Herzfeld Anthropology, 108 Jonathan Parry 1998 228 x 152 mm 256pp 1 table 4 graphs 0 521 56355 0 Hardback £47.50 The monograph series Cambridge Studies in 0 521 56497 2 Paperback £17.95 Social and Cultural Anthropology publishes analytical ethnographies, comparative Publications of the works and contributions to theory. All Society for Psychological combine an expert and critical command Anthropology of ethnography and a sophisticated ‘Once in a great while there appears a book engagement with current theoretical that alters the dimensions of the Publications of the Society for Psychological debates. intellectual field to which it speaks. This is Anthropology is a joint initiative of Varieties of Javanese Religion such a book. In it, the author marshals Cambridge University Press and the Society insights drawn from ethnography and for Psychological Anthropology, a unit of An Anthropological Account ecology, the cybernetics of communication, the American Anthropological Association. Andrew Beatty comparative religion and semiotics to The series has been established to publish establish the centrality of ritual for what it books in psychological anthropology and means to be human. In clear and elegant related fields of cognitive anthropology, prose, Roy Rappaport calls into question ethnopsychology and cultural psychology. many of the ways we think about the It includes works of original theory, world. The result is an intellectual empirical research, and edited collections adventure of the first magnitude’ that address current issues. This series Eric Wolf reflects a renewed interest among culture ‘Roy Rappaport’s book is an admirable theorists in ideas about the self, mind-body blend of rich information and analytical interaction, social cognition, mental power. It is a committed and challenging models, processes of cultural aquisition, reflection on the importance of religion motivation and agency, gender and and the constructive power of rituals for a . post-modern world, seen in the light of it pre-modern and modern history. A courageous work in a period of over specialized scholarship, I have never read such a comprehensive and penetrating treatise on rituals.’ Hans Kung, Universität Tubingen Social and Cultural Anthropology 27

Forthcoming Publications of the Society for Psychological Biocultural Approaches to the Power and the Self Anthropology 2001 228 x 152 mm 272pp 2 tables Edited by Jeannette Marie Mageo 4 figures Edited by Alexander Laban Hinton Rutgers University, New Jersey This edited volume deals with an important 0 521 80319 5 Hardback c. £40.00 0 521 00552 3 Paperback c. £15.95 Are emotions given by biology or are they but neglected topic the ways in which power Publication August 2001 is experienced by individuals, both as agents learnt? Are they the same everywhere, or culturally variable? Research in this field and as objects of the exercise of power. Cultures under Siege Each contributor presents a series of case tends to be polarised between neo- Collective Violence and Trauma in Darwinian and culturalist perspectives. studies drawn from a variety of cultural Interdisciplinary Perspectives contexts, including the analysis of the appeal This volume attempts to transcend the Edited by Antonius C. G. M. Robben traditional oppositions, proposing various of Japanese superhero toys for American Universiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands children; the conditions that lead to strategies for integrating both approaches and Marcelo D. Suarez-Orozco to the study of emotion. dehumanising treatment of patients in an Harvard University, Massachusetts American nursing home; the experiences of Contributors: Alexander Laban Hinton, a Turkish immigrant woman in the Carol M. Worthman, Daniel M. T. Fassler, Netherlands; a contribution relating James Chisholm, D. T. Harper-Jones, theories about the capacity to commit Margot L. Lyon, Keith McNeal, Este genocidal violence to what ‘everyday forms of Armstrong, Lee Blonder, Charles Laughlin, violence’, and other cases from New Guinea Jason Throop and Samoa. The introduction provides a Publications of the Society for Psychological readable historical review and synthesis of Anthropology, 10 the theoretical ideas that provide the context 1999 228 x 152 mm 383pp 5 tables 16 figures for the work presented in the book. 0 521 65211 1 Hardback £52.50 0 521 65569 2 Paperback £18.95 Publications of the Society for Psychological Anthropology A Cognitive Theory of Cultural Meaning 2001 228 x 152 mm 300pp Claudia Strauss 0 521 80839 1 Hardback c. £50.00 and Naomi Quinn 0 521 00460 8 Paperback c. £18.95 Publication November 2001 Publications of the Society for Psychological Anthropology, 9 Forthcoming 1998 228 x 152 mm 335pp 1 line diagram 5 figures The Psychology of Cultural Collective violence changes the 0 521 59409 X Hardback £52.50 Experience perpetrators, the victims, and the societies 0 521 59541 X Paperback £18.95 Edited by Carmella C. Moore in which it occurs. It targets the body, the Forthcoming psyche, and the socio-cultural order. How University of California, Irvine The Navigation of Feeling and Holly F. Mathews do people come to terms with these tragic Framework for a History of Emotions East Carolina University events, and how are cultures affected by massive outbreaks of violence? This book is William M. Reddy The essays in this volume focus upon a groundbreaking collection of essays by Duke University, North Carolina the relationship of individual experience anthropologists, psychologists and In The Navigation of Feeling: Framework to culture, and chart a new research psychoanalysts, drawing on field research in for the History of Emotions, William M. agenda for psychological anthropology many different parts of the world. Profiting Reddy offers a new theory of emotions in the twenty-first century. Drawing from an interdisciplinary dialogue, the which both critiques and expands upon upon fieldwork in diverse cultural authors provide provocative, at times recent research in the fields of settings, the authors use a range of deeply troubling, insights into the darker anthropology and psychology. contemporary perspectives in the field, side of humanity, and they also propose Exploring the links between emotion including person-centred ethnography, new ways of understanding the terrible and cognition, between culture and activity theory, attachment theory and things that people are capable of doing to emotional expression, Reddy applies this cultural theory, to describe the each other. theory of emotions to the processes of ways in which people think, feel, history. He demonstrates how emotions remember, and solve problems. Contributors: Marcelo M. Suarez-Orozco, change over time, how emotions have a Fascinating insights emerge from these Antonius C. G. M. Robben, Yolanda very important impact on the course of fine-grained accounts of personal Gampel, Roberta J. Apfel, Bennett Simon, events, and how different social orders experience. The research demonstrates David J. de Levita, Tanya M. Luhrmann, either facilitate or constrain emotional that it is possible to identify cross- Carola Suarez-Orozco, Vamik D. Volkan, life. In an investigation of Revolutionary cultural universals in psychological Norman Itzkowitz, Katherine Pratt Ewing, France, where sentimentalism in development and mental states, and that R. A. LeVine literature and philosophy had promised individual psychology is not determined Publications of the Society for Psychological a new and unprecedented kind of solely by unique cultural patterns. Anthropology, 11 2000 228 x 152 mm 300pp emotional liberty, Reddy’s theory of Contributors: Holly F. Mathews, 0 521 78026 8 Hardback £40.00 emotions and historical change is Carmella C. Moore, Drew Westen, Carl 0 521 78435 2 Paperback £14.95 successfully put to the test. Ratner, Robert A. LeVine, Karin Norman, Linda C. Garro, Stephen C. Leavitt, Susan Love Brown, Eve Danziger, Robert L. Munroe, Ruth H. Munroe

Visit our website at uk.cambridge.org 28 Social and Cultural Anthropology

‘Brilliant and wonderful: this is a book New The Transmission of Chinese of profound scholarship that will Living and Working with the New Medicine become central to the fast growing Medical Technologies Elisabeth Hsu interdisciplinary interest in emotion. Intersections of Inquiry University of Cambridge Reddy bridges psychology, anthropology Edited by Margaret Lock Based on her experience as disciple of a and history to explore the fascinating McGill University, Montréal private practitioner, participating in idea that emotion is the process that Allan Young scholarly seminars of a senior Chinese manages the concerns that are most McGill University doctor, and studying at a college of intimate to humankind.’ and Alberto Cambrosio Traditional Chinese Medicine, Elisabeth Keith Oatley, University of Toronto McGill University Hsu provides an insider’s account of Contents: Part I. What are Emotions: traditional medical education in China, 1. Answers from cognitive psychology; revealing the way in which context of 2. Answers from anthropology; instruction shapes knowledge. 3. Emotional expression as a form of Cambridge Studies in Medical Anthropology, 7 speech act; 4. Emotional liberty; Part II. 1999 228 x 152 mm 306pp 0 521 64236 1 Hardback £45.00 Emotions in History: France 0 521 64542 5 Paperback £16.95 1700–1850: 5. The flowering of sentimentalism (1700–1789); Doctors for Democracy 6. Sentimentalism in the making of the Health Professionals in the Nepal Revolution Revolution (1789–1815); 7. Liberal Vincanne Adams reason, romantic passions (1815–1848); Cambridge Studies in Medical Anthropology, 6 1998 228 x 152 mm 263pp 9 half-tones 8. Personal destinies: case material of 0 521 58486 8 Hardback £60.00 early nineteenth century; Conclusion; 0 521 58548 1 Paperback £20.95 Appendix A. Anomalous cases from the Gazette des Tribunaux; Appendix B. Medicine and Morality in Haiti The Contest for Healing Power Anomalous cases from the archives of Paul Brodwin the Tribunal civil de Versailles. This stimulating collection of essays is the Cambridge Studies in Medical Anthropology, 3 2001 228 x 152 mm 400pp 6 line diagrams product of face-to-face dialogues among 2 tables 1996 228 x 152 mm 256pp 17 half-tones 1 map anthropologists, sociologists, and 1 genealogical table 0 521 80303 9 Hardback c. £45.00 0 521 57543 5 Paperback £20.95 0 521 00472 1 Paperback c. £14.95 philosopher-historians, all of whom focus their attention on the newly created Publication October 2001 Embodiment and Experience biomedical technologies and their The Existential Ground of Culture and Self Cambridge Studies in application in practice. Drawing on Edited by Thomas J. Csordas ethnographic and historical case studies, Cambridge Studies in Medical Anthropology, 2 Medical Anthropology the authors show how biomedical 1994 228 x 152 mm 306pp 2 half-tones 1 table technologies are produced through the 0 521 45890 0 Paperback £16.95 Medical anthropology is the fastest growing agencies of tools and techniques, scientists Pragmatic Women and Body Politics specialist area within anthropology, both in and doctors, funding bodies, patients, North America and in Europe. Beginning Edited by Margaret Lock clients, and the public. Despite shared and Patricia Alice Kaufert as an applied field serving public health concerns, these essays reveal that the specialists, medical anthropology now Cambridge Studies in Medical Anthropology, 5 authors have achieved no consensus about 1998 228 x 152 mm 376pp provides a significant forum for many of the objectives of their research, and the 0 521 62099 6 Hardback £52.50 the most urgent debates in anthropology deep epistemological divides clearly remain 0 521 62929 2 Paperback £18.95 and the humanities. It includes the study – making for provocative reading. of medical institutions and health care in a Community Participation in Health Contributors: Alberto Cambrosio, Allan The Politics of Primary Care in Costa Rica variety of rich and poor societies, the Lynn M. Morgan investigation of the cultural construction of Young, Margaret Lock, Hans-Jorg Cambridge Studies in Medical Anthropology, 1 illness, and the analysis of ideas about the Rheinberger, Paul Rabinow, Ilana Lowy, Annemarie Mol, Peter Keating, Patricia A. 1993 228 x 152 mm 195pp 2 line diagrams body, birth, maturation, aging and death. 3 tables Cambridge Studies in Medical Anthropology Kaufert, Rayna Rapp, Joseph Dumit, 0 521 41898 4 Hardback £37.50 comprises theoretically innovative Margaret Lock, Veena Das Cambridge Studies in Medical Anthropology, 8 Questioning Misfortune monographs and state-of-the-art edited The Pragmatics of Uncertainty in Eastern Uganda 2000 228 x 152 mm 306pp 2 figures collections. The series is complemented by Susan Reynolds Whyte 0 521 65210 3 Hardback £42.50 Themes in Medical Anthropology, which 0 521 65568 4 Paperback £15.95 Cambridge Studies in Medical Anthropology, 4 presents short, concisely written books 1998 228 x 152 mm 272pp 12 half-tones exploring key themes in the discipline. 1 colour plate 0 521 59402 2 Hardback £52.50 0 521 59558 4 Paperback £18.95 Linguistic Anthropology 29

cultural history of the American South, the Lewis Henry Morgan A Pack of Lies Lectures Towards a Sociology of Lying second with urban and northern black J. A. Barnes popular culture, and the third with policy Australian National University, Canberra issues. It also covers the heated political Prey into Hunter The Politics of Religious Experience Themes in the Social Sciences and educational debates current today Maurice Bloch 1994 228 x 152 mm 214pp about the status fo the African American 0 521 45978 8 Paperback £14.95 Foreword by Alfred Harris dialect, which, the author notes, is ‘the Lewis Henry Morgan Lectures Old Age most studied and best known langauge 1991 228 x 152 mm 131pp Constructions and Deconstructions dialect in the world. 0 521 41154 8 Hardback £40.00 Haim Hazan Studies in the Social and Cultural Foundations 0 521 42312 0 Paperback £14.95 Tel-Aviv University of Language Themes in the Social Sciences Medicine, Rationality and Experience 2001 228 x 152 mm 220pp 15 figures 4 maps 1994 228 x 152 mm 138pp An Anthropological Perspective 0 521 80671 2 Hardback c. £35.00 0 521 44748 8 Paperback £11.95 Byron J. Good 0 521 00149 8 Paperback c. £12.95 Publication November 2001 Lewis Henry Morgan Lectures The Principles of Representative 1993 228 x 152 mm 260pp Government Shifting Languages 0 521 42576 X Paperback £16.95 Bernard Manin New York University and the CNRS, Paris J. Joseph Errington Death in Banaras Themes in the Social Sciences Yale University, Connecticut Jonathan P. Parry 1997 228 x 152 mm 251pp 1 table Foreword by Anthony T. Carter Joseph Errington analyses the role of 0 521 45258 9 Hardback £42.50 language in development in Indonesia. His Lewis Henry Morgan Lectures 0 521 45891 9 Paperback £15.95 1994 228 x 152 mm 340pp 12 half-tones analysis of ‘shifting languages’ in two 9 tables 1 figure 6 maps 1 genealogical table Javanese villages examines changing 0 521 46625 3 Paperback £21.95 Linguistic conversational practices in relation to The Anthropology of Justice questions of ethnicity, nationalism, and Law as Culture in Islamic Society Anthropology political culture. The theoretical Lawrence Rosen implications extend beyond Indonesia and Lewis Henry Morgan Lectures South East Asia, to the developing world in 1989 228 x 152 mm 118pp 9 half-tones Studies in the Social and general. 0 521 36740 9 Paperback £16.95 Cultural Foundations of Studies in the Social and Cultural Foundations After Nature Language of Language, 19 English Kinship in the Late Twentieth Century 1998 228 x 152 mm 240pp 2 tables 5 figures Marilyn Strathern Linguistic anthropologists seek to 2 maps 0 521 63267 6 Hardback £45.00 Lewis Henry Morgan Lectures understand the social and cultural character 0 521 63448 2 Paperback £16.95 1992 228 x 152 mm 258pp 5 line diagrams of language: they investigate socioculturally 6 half-tones grounded ‘meanings’ and ‘functions’ of 0 521 42680 4 Paperback £18.95 Language, Identity, and linguistic forms, and the variations in Marginality in Indonesia Magic, Science and Religion and the Scope language usage across cultures. Studies in The Changing Nature of Ritual Speech on of Rationality the Social and Cultural Foundations of the Island of Sumba Stanley J. Tambiah Language publishes monographs and edited Joel C. Kuipers Lewis Henry Morgan Lectures collections that make substantive George Washington University, Washington DC 1990 228 x 152 mm 199pp 1 line diagram ethnographic and theoretical contributions ‘Neatly orchestrating his analysis with 18 half-tones to this growing subfield of anthropology. 0 521 37631 9 Paperback £16.95 admirable concision and lucidity, Kuipers The books are aimed at scholars in the has composed an insightful study that is Themes in the Social sociology and anthropology of language, thoroughly accessible to any reader anthropological linguistics, sociolinguistics interested in the shifting nexus between Sciences and socioculturally informed language and power.’ Series Editors: Jack Goody psycholinguistics. Benjamin G. Zimmer, Times Literary Geoffrey Hawthorn Forthcoming Supplement The purpose of this series is to publish Language, Discourse and Power in Studies in the Social and Cultural Foundations discussions of general interest to of Language, 18 African American Culture 1998 228 x 152 mm 203pp 19 half-tones anthropologists, sociologists, Marcyliena Morgan 5 graphs 2 figures 3 maps demographers, and to those economists, Harvard University, Massachusetts 0 521 62408 8 Hardback £40.00 historians and political scientists who are 0 521 62495 9 Paperback £14.95 concerned with issues that extend beyond African American language is central to the Rethinking Linguistic Relativity the conventional limits of their disciplines. teaching of linguistics and language in the United States, and this book, in the series Edited by John J. Gumperz Both theoretical and empirical, and often and Stephen C. Levinson comparative, it publishes books on a range Studies in the Social and Cultural Studies in the Social and Cultural Foundations of of diverse societies. They are useful Foundations of Language, is aimed specifically at upper level undergraduates Language, 17 teaching tools for advanced undergraduates 1996 228 x 152 mm 496pp and graduates. and graduates. it covers the entire field – 0 521 44433 0 Hardback £60.00 grammar, speech, and verbal genres, and it 0 521 44890 5 Paperback £22.95 also discusses various historical strands that must be identified in order to understand the dvelopment of African American English. The first deals with the social and

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Language Shift and Cultural Reproduction Contributors: Paul Newman, Martha Sex and Gender in Socialization, Self and Syncretism in a Papua New Ratliff, Larry M. Hyman, Marianne Paleopathological Perspective Guinean Village Mithun, Gerrit J. Dimmendaal, Ken Don Kulick Edited by Anne L. Grauer Hale, David Gil, Nancy C. Dorian, Loyola University, Chicago Studies in the Social and Cultural Foundations of Language, 14 Shobhana L. Chelliah, Daniel L. and Patricia Stuart-Macadam 1997 228 x 152 mm 335pp 12 half-tones Everett, Fiona McLaughlin, Thierno University of Toronto 3 tables 3 figures 3 maps Seydou Sall, Ian Maddieson, Keren 0 521 59926 1 Paperback £21.95 Exploring the Differences examines the Rice, Nicholas Evans ramifications of sex and gender on ancient Grammatical Categories and Cognition 2001 228 x 152 mm 304pp 4 line diagrams 7 half-tones 3 tables and modern human diseases such as A Case Study of the Linguistic Relativity 0 521 66049 1 Hardback £42.50 osteoporosis, anaemia, infection and Hypothesis 0 521 66937 5 Paperback £15.95 John Arthur Lucy trauma. Written in an accessible style, it Publication June 2001 will appeal to researchers and students in Studies in the Social and Cultural Foundations of Language, 13 physical anthropology, evolutionary biology 1996 228 x 152 mm 227pp 45 tables 15 figures The Development of Standard and women’s studies. 0 521 56620 7 Paperback £17.95 English, 1300–1800 1998 228 x 152 mm 204pp 19 line diagrams Theories, Descriptions, Conflicts 13 half-tones 34 tables Forthcoming 0 521 62090 2 Hardback £37.50 Edited by Laura Wright Linguistic Fieldwork University of Cambridge Forthcoming Edited by Paul Newman There are many questions yet to be Language and the Internet Indiana University answered about how Standard English David Crystal and Martha Ratliff came into existence. The claim that it Wayne State University developed from a Central Midlands dialect propagated by clerks in the Chancery, the medieval writing office of the king, is one explanation that has dominated textbooks to date. This book reopens the debate about the origins of Standard English, challenging earlier accounts and revealing a far more complex and intriguing history. An international team of fourteen specialists offer a wide-ranging analysis, from theoretical discussions of the origin of dialects, to detailed descriptions of the history of individual Standard English features. The volume ranges from Middle English to the Modern English period, and looks at a variety of text types. It concludes David Crystal investigates the nature of the that Standard English had no one single impact which the Internet is making on This book is a collection of original ancestor dialect, but is the cumulative language. There is already a widespread essays on the practice of linguistic result of generations of authoritative popular mythology that the Internet is fieldwork and language documentation. writing from many text types. going to be bad for the future of language Twelve of the leading field linguists in Contributors: Laura Wright, Jim Milroy, – that technospeak will rule, standards be the world have written personal essays Richard J. Watts, Jonathan Hope, lost, and creativity diminished as about the study of languages in a Raymond Hickey, Gabriella Mazzon, globalization imposes sameness. The natural setting. Drawing on extensive Derek Keene, Matti Rissanen, Irma argument of this book is the reverse: that research experience, they pass on the Taavitsainen, Anneli Meurman-Solin, the Internet is in fact enabling a dramatic lessons they have learnt, review the Merja Kytö, Suzanne Romaine, Susan expansion to take place in the range and techniques that they found worked best Fitzmaurice, Roger Lass variety of language, and is providing in practice, and discuss a variety of 2000 228 x 152 mm 248pp 14 tables 5 graphs unprecedented opportunities for personal relevant topics, including the attitude of 2 figures 7 maps creativity. The Internet has now been the linguist, the structure and content of 0 521 77114 5 Hardback £37.50 around long enough for us to ‘take a view’ the work session, the varied roles of about the way in which it is being shaped native speakers, and the practical and by and is shaping language and languages, personal challenges of doing research in and there is no-one better placed than an unfamiliar environment. Covering a David Crystal to take that view. His book wide range of field areas, and written in is written to be accessible to anyone who an accessible manner, the book will be has used the Internet and who has an indispensable to fieldworkers in interest in language issues. linguistics, anthropology, folklore and 2001 216 x 138 mm c.208pp 8 tables oral history. 0 521 80212 1 Hardback c. £13.95 Publication August 2001 Linguistic Anthropology 31

Language Death Canto Edition feature of human social intelligence, language evolution is driven by biologically David Crystal The Seeds of Speech anomalous levels of social cooperation. Language Origin and Evolution Phonetic competence correspondingly Jean Aitchison reflects social pressures for vocal imitation, University of Oxford learning, and other forms of social transmission. Distinctively human social and cultural strategies gave rise to the complex syntactical structure of speech. This book, presenting language as a remarkable social adaptation, testifies to the growing influence of evolutionary thinking in contemporary linguistics. It will be welcomed by all those interested in human evolution, evolutionary psychology, linguistic anthropology, and general linguistics. Contributors: Derek Bickerton, Bart de Boer, Robbins Burling, Andrew Carstairs- The rapid endangerment and death of McCarthy, Barbara L. Davis, Rory A. many minority languages across the world DePaolis, Jean-Louis Dessalles, Colin Fyfe, is a matter of widespread concern, not only James R. Hurford, Simon Kirby, Chris among linguists and anthropologists but Human language is a weird Knight, David Lightfoot, Daniel among all concerned with issues of cultural communication system: it has more in Livingstone, Peter J. MacNeilage, Frederick identity in an increasingly globalized common with birdsong than with the calls J. Newmeyer, Jason Noble, Mark Pagel, culture. By some counts, only 600 of the of other primates. In this wide-ranging and Camilla Power, Michael Studdert-Kennedy, 6000 or so languages in the world are ‘safe’ accessible overview, Jean Aitchison explores Marilyn M. Vihman, Robert P. Worden, from the threat of extinction. A leading the reasons why language is so strange, Alison Wray commentator and popular writer on outlines recent theories about its origin, 2000 228 x 152 mm 392pp 68 line diagrams language issues, David Crystal asks the and discusses possible paths of evolution. 22 tables fundamental question, ‘Why is language ‘We must be grateful to Jean Aitchison for 0 521 78157 4 Hardback £45.00 0 521 78696 7 Paperback £16.95 death so important?’, reviews the reasons so very readably assembling a good deal of for the current crisis, and investigates what recent work that might seem to hint at New in Paperback is being done to reduce its impact. The how language began … liberally peppered Language and Conceptualization book contains not only intelligent with fetching quotations from all manner argument, but moving descriptions of the of sources, ranging from the cartoon Edited by Jan Nuyts Universitaire Instellung Antwerpen, Belgium decline and demise of particular languages, character Charlie Brown through Lewis and practical advice for anyone interested Carroll to Jonathan Swift’s satirical novel and Eric Pederson in pursuing the subject further. Max-Planck-Institut für Psycholinguistik, The Gulliver’s Travels … the author goes out of Netherlands ‘Professor David Crystal, a linguistics her way to offer a restful read to all To what extent is conceptualization based expert, whose book Language Death, comers.’ on linguistic representation? And to what published last week examines the prospects The Times extent is it variable across cultures, for 3,000 endangered languages.’ in an Canto communities, or even individuals? This article on Celtic languages.’ 2000 216 x 138 mm 294pp 27 line diagrams volume is one of the first attempts to tackle Independent on Sunday 8 half-tones 1 table 5 maps 0 521 78571 5 Paperback £9.95 explicitly the issue of the relationship Contents: Preface; 1. What is language between linguistic and conceptual death?; 2. Why should we care?; 3. Why do The Evolutionary Emergence of representation from a truly languages die?; 4. Where do we begin?; Language interdisciplinary perspective. 5. What can be done?; List of Social Function and the Origins of Linguistic Contributors: Eric Pederson, Jan Nuyts, organisations; Further reading; Index of Form Stephen C. Levinson, Balthasar Bickel, languages; Subject index. Edited by Chris Knight Paul Werth, Eve Sweetser, Mary Carroll, 2000 216 x 138 mm 208pp 1 table University of East London 0 521 65321 5 Hardback £13.95 Russell S. Tomlin, David McNeill, Jay Michael Studdert-Kennedy David Atlas, Ronald W. Langacker, Edward Haskins Laboratories A. Robinson and James Hurford Language Culture and Cognition, 1 University of Edinburgh 2000 228 x 152 mm 290pp 25 line diagrams Language has no counterpart in the animal 2 half-tones 7 tables 1 map world. Unique to Homo sapiens, it appears 0 521 77481 0 Paperback £16.95 inseparable from human nature. But how, Also available when and why did it emerge? The 0 521 55303 2 Hardback £40.00 contributors to this volume – linguists, anthropologists, cognitive scientists, and others – adopt a modern Darwinian perspective which offers a bold synthesis of the human and natural sciences. As a

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Language and Gesture Textbook aspects of bilinguality: intercultural communication; 10. Societal bilingualism, Edited by David McNeill An Introduction to Pidgins and intergroup relations and sociolinguistic University of Chicago Creoles variations; 11. Bilingual education; This landmark study examines the role of John A. Holm Conclusion; Notes; Glossary; References; gestures in relation to speech and thought. Universidade de Coimbra, Portugal Subject index; Author index. Leading scholars, including psychologist, This textbook is a clear and concise 2000 228 x 152 mm 482pp 3 tables 13 figures linguists and anthropologists, offer state-of- 0 521 64049 0 Hardback £60.00 introduction to the study of how new 0 521 64843 2 Paperback £20.95 the art analyses to demonstrate that languages come into being. Starting with gestures are not merely an embellishment an overview of the field’s basic concepts, it The Rise and Fall of Languages of speech but are integral parts of language surveys the new languages that developed R. M. W. Dixon itself. as a result of the European expansion to La Trobe University, Victoria 1997 198 x 129 mm 175pp 7 figures Contributors: David McNeill, John the Americas, Africa, Asia and the Pacific. 0 521 62654 4 Paperback £11.95 Haviland, Adam Kendon, Asli Özyürek, Contents: List of tables; Preface; Charles Goodwin, Nobuhiro Furuyama, Abbreviations and symbols; Maps; Textbook Curtis Le Baron, Jurgen Streeck, Susan D. 1. Introduction; 2. The development of Linguistic Anthropology Duncan, Sotaro Kita, Shuichi Nobe, theory; 3. Social factors; Alessandro Duranti Rachel I. Mayberry, Joselynne Jaques, University of California, Los Angeles 4. Lexicosemantics; 5. Phonology; Cambridge Textbooks in Linguistics Elena Levy, Carol Fowler, Cynthia Butcher, 6. Syntax; 7. Conclusions; References; Index. Susan Goldin-Meadow, Robert M. Krauss, 1997 228 x 152 mm 420pp 4 half-tones Cambridge Textbooks in Linguistics 0 521 44536 1 Hardback £45.00 0 521 44993 6 Paperback £17.95 Yihsiu Chen, Rebecca F. Gottesman, Jan 2000 228 x 152 mm 304pp 8 tables 2 maps Peter de Ruiter, Scott Liddell, Jill Morford, 0 521 58460 4 Hardback £42.50 The Study of Language 0 521 58581 3 Paperback £15.95 Judy Kegl, William C. Stokoe Second edition Language Culture and Cognition, 2 Textbook George Yule 2000 228 x 152 mm 420pp 44 line diagrams Louisiana State University 31 tables 4 graphs New Edition 1996 228 x 152 mm 308pp 27 line diagrams 0 521 77166 8 Hardback £42.50 4 half-tones 1 map 0 521 77761 5 Paperback £15.95 Bilinguality and Bilingualism 0 521 56053 5 Hardback £37.50 0 521 56851 X Paperback £13.95 Second edition Forthcoming Josiane F. Hamers Language Acquisition and Université Laval, Québec Conceptual Development and Michel H. A. Blanc Sociology and Edited by Melissa Bowerman Birkbeck College, University of London Cultural Studies Max-Planck-Institut für Psycholinguistik, The This updated and revised edition presents Netherlands new knowledge about languages in contact, The Organization of Attachment and Stephen C. Levinson ranging from individual bilinguality to Max-Planck-Institut für Psycholinguistik, The Relationships societal bilingualism. It covers topics such Netherlands Maturation, Culture, and Context as the relationship between culture, identity, Recent years have seen a revolution in our and language behaviour in multicultural Edited by Patricia McKinsey Crittenden Family Relations Institute, Miami, Florida knowledge of how children learn to think settings; communication strategies; and Angelika Hartl Claussen and speak. In this volume, leading scholars language shift; pidgins and creoles; University of Miami from this rapidly evolving field of research language planning; and bilingual education. examine the relationship between child Quality of attachment has been a central ‘Bilinguality and Bilingualism succeeds in language acquisition and cognitive variable in developmental research during presenting a wide-ranging and critical development, bringing together two vital the last two decades. This volume presents survey of theorizing and research on strands of investigation into close dialogue. new theory on attachment that broadens its bilingualism … firstly, it presents range to ages beyond infancy, to many Contributors: Jonas Langer, Alison comprehensive, integrated, and accurate cultures and to endangered populations. Gopnik, Elizabeth S. Spelke, Sanna views of the state of the art in the area of Tsivkin, Linda B. Smith, Michael bilinguality and bilingualism; secondly, it Contributors: Patricia M. Crittenden, Tomasello, Paul Bloom, Susan Carey, sets wider challenges for theorizing in this Karin Grossmann, Klaus Grossmann, Dedre Gentner, Lera Boroditsky, John field … an impressive and important piece Graziella Maria Fava Vizzielo, Cristina Lucy, Suzanne Gaskins, Werner Deutsch, of scholarship.’ Ferrero, Marina Musico, Liselotte Ahnert, Angela Wagner, Renate Buchardt, Nina Applied Linguistics T. Meischner, M. Zeibe, A. Schmidt, Schultz, Jörg Nakath, Patricia Brooks, Gunilla Bohlin, Berit Hagekull, Anna von Contents: Foreword to the second edition; Martin Braine, Xiangdong Jia, Maria da der Lippe, Angelika Hartl Claussen, Irma Preface; Introduction; 1. Definitions and Graca Dias, Ken Drozd, Eve Clark, Dan Moilanen, Anne Kunelius, Tiina guiding principles; 2. Dimensions and Slobin, Heike Behrens, Melissa Bowerman, Tirkonnen, Nathan Szajnberg, Stanislawa measurement of bilinguality and Soonja Choi, Penelope Brown, Lourdes de Lis, Kim Chisolm, Douglas M. Teti, Claudia bilingualism; 3. The ontogenesis of León, Stephen C. Levinson Lange, Mary F. Partridge, Hellgard Rauh, bilinguality; 4. Bilinguality: cognitive Language Culture and Cognition, 3 Ute Ziegenhain, Bernd Muller, Lex Wijnroks, development and the sociocultural context; 2001 228 x 152 mm 614pp 35 line diagrams Sydney L. Hans, Victor J. Bernstein, 5. The social and psychological foundations 32 tables 30 graphs 29 figures Belinda E. Sims, Katherine Black, Elizabeth of bilinguality; 6. Bilinguality: 0 521 59358 1 Hardback £60.00 Jaeger, Kathleen McCartney, Isabel Soares, 0 521 59659 9 Paperback £21.95 neuropsychological foundations; Elisabeth Fremmer-Bombik, M. C. Silva 7. Information processing in the bilingual; 2000 234 x 156 mm 444pp 19 line diagrams 8. Social psychological aspects of bilinguality: 9 half-tones 74 tables culture and identity; 9. Social psychological 0 521 58002 1 Hardback £52.50 Sociology and Cultural Studies 33

New Danielle Johnson, Mary Gauvain, Steven Forthcoming from Stanford R. Guberman, Christine C. Pappas Making Social Science Matter 1999 228 x 152 mm 280pp 2 line diagrams God Aboveground Why Social Inquiry Fails and How It Can 8 tables Catholic Church, Postsocialist State, and Succeed Again 0 521 58324 1 Hardback £40.00 Transnational Processes in a Chinese Village Bent Flyvbjerg 0 521 58722 0 Paperback £14.95 Eriberto P. Lozada Aalborg University, Denmark Butler University, Indiana Stanford Translated by Steven Sampson Feeding China’s Little Emperors This ethnographic study of a Chinese Catholic village reveals how the rapid Making Social Science Matter presents an Food, Children, and Social Change penetration of transnational processes into exciting new approach to social and Edited by Jun Jing the People’s Republic of China during the behavioral science, including theoretical City University of New York argument, methodological guidelines, and post-Mao period has redefined and created practical examples. Bent Flyvbjerg shows How China’s transition to a market new social and cultural structures in rural why social science fails to emulate natural economy and integration into the global communities. In examining the resurfacing science. He then identifies the strength of economic arena has transformed Chinese of a Catholic community in a Hakka social science in its rich, reflexive analysis children’s food habits, and changed the village in Jiaoling county, Guandong, the of values and power. intimate relationship of childhood, book shows what it means to be part of a parenthood, and family life. ‘This is social science that matters.’ global and modern rural village. The Pierre Bourdieu Contributors: Jun Jing, Georgia S. Guldan, Hakka are members of a Chinese diasporic 2001 228 x 152 mm 214pp Bernadine W. L. Chee, Maris Boyd group that in the past few decades have 0 521 77268 0 Hardback £37.50 Gillette, Guo Yuhua, Eriberto P. Lozada, Jr, mobilized international campaigns to 0 521 77568 X Paperback £13.95 Suzanne K. Gottschang, Zhao Yang, James strengthen ethnic solidarity. After surviving L. Watson campaigns of persecution in the Maoist era, Forthcoming 2000 216 x 138 mm 296pp 7 line diagrams Catholic villagers incorporated their village Central Africans and Cultural 3 tables church into the state religious 0 8047 3133 0 Hardback £35.00 Transformations in the American 0 8047 3134 9 Paperback £12.95 administrative structure while remaining Diaspora faithful to Catholic traditions. They Edited by Linda Heywood Streetlife China managed this transformation despite a Howard University, Washington DC Michael Dutton multiplicity of national and transnational processes that might have deterred them. Sets out a new paradigm that increases our University of Melbourne understanding of African culture and the ‘Lozada succeeded in residing in and forces that led to its transformation during becoming a part of this village over a the period of the Atlantic slave trade and period of several years in the mid- to late beyond. This volume puts long due 1990s, and his resulting ethnographic emphasis on the importance of Central descriptions are compelling and persuasive. African culture to the cultures of the At the same time, he convincingly portrays United States, Brazil, and the Caribbean. the village and its inhabitants within an Focusing on the Kongo/Angola culture overarching framework that balances local zone, the book illustrates how Africans re- identity with larger national and shaped their cultural institutions as they transnational processes.’ interacted with Portuguese slave traders, Daniel H. Bays, University of Kansas and follows them through all the regions 2002 216 x 138 mm 0 8047 4097 6 Hardback where they were taken as slaves. Publication February 2002 2002 228 x 152 mm c.275pp 1 line diagram 8 half-tones 28 tables 12 maps Forthcoming from Stanford 0 521 80243 1 Hardback c. £32.50 0 521 00278 8 Paperback c. £11.95 Strangers in the City Publication January 2002 Reconfigurations of Space, Power, and Social Networks with China’s Floating Population Children’s Engagement in the ‘Dutton describes this wonderful book as ‘a Li Zhang World treasure box of possibilities. Possibilities University of California, Davis Sociocultural Perspectives both for Chinese society and for those of With rapid commercialization, a booming Edited by Artin Goncu us in the business of making sense of it.’ urban economy, and the relaxation of state University of Illinois, Chicago You never know what you will come across migration policies, over 100 million This volume proposes to study children’s in its pages … It is endlessly interesting.’ peasants, known as China’s ‘floating development and education within its The Guardian population’, have streamed into large cities social as well as cultural context. It brings Cambridge Modern China Series seeking employment and a better life. This together the most recent theoretical 1999 247 x 174 mm 320pp 10 line diagrams massive flow of rural migrants directly advances in cultural psychology in order to 70 half-tones 4 tables challenges Chinese socialist modes of state 0 521 63141 6 Hardback £40.00 establish a framework for the studies 0 521 63719 8 Paperback £14.95 control. This book traces the profound reported in it. transformations of space, power relations, Contributors: Artin Goncu, Suzanne and social networks within a mobile Gaskin, Jonathan Tudge, Diane Hogan, population that has broken through the Soeun Lee, Peeter Tammeveski, Marika constraints of the government’s household Meltsas, Natalya Kulakova, Irina registration system. The author explores Snezhkova, Sarah Putnam, Jo Ann M. Farver, this important social change through a Wendy L. Haight, Ute Tuermer, Joyti Jain, detailed ethnographic account of the

For monthly email alerts visit uk.cambridge.org/cais 34 Sociology and Cultural Studies construction, destruction, and eventual New from Stanford Accounting for Tastes reconstruction of the largest migrant Australian Everyday Cultures community in Beijing. In revealing the Between Mecca and Beijing Tony Bennett complexities and uncertainties of the Modernization and Consumption Among Urban Chinese Muslims Open University, Milton Keynes shifting power and social relations in post- Michael Emmison Mao China, this book challenges the Maris Boyd Gillette Haverford College, Pennsylvania The University of Queensland common notion that sees recent changes as and John Frow an inevitable move toward liberal Through a detailed study of the daily life – University of Edinburgh capitalism and democracy. eating habits, dress styles, housing, 2002 216 x 138 mm marriage and death rituals, religious Accounting for Tastes is the most systematic 0 8047 4030 5 Paperback practices, education, family organization – and substantial study of Australian cultural Publication January 2002 of the Hui inhabitants of Xi’an, Maris tastes, preferences and activities ever Forthcoming from Stanford Boyd Gillette examines how a community published. It is a book that makes a of urban Chinese Muslims classified by the substantial contribution to the empirical and Women Traders in Cross-Cultural state as ‘backward’ use consumption to policy-oriented social inquiry into questions Perspective position themselves more favorably within of cultural practices and preferences. Mediating Identities, Marketing Wares the Chinese government’s official paradigm 1999 228 x 152 mm 327pp 42 line diagrams Edited by Linda J. J. Seligmann for development. By selectively consuming 107 tables George Mason University, Virginia 0 521 63234 X Hardback £45.00 goods and adopting fashions they regard as 0 521 63504 7 Paperback £16.95 This innovative volume studies women as modern and non-Chinese – which include economic, political, and cultural mediators commodities and styles from both the West Forthcoming from Stanford of space, gender, value, and language in and the Muslim world – these Chinese The Price of Death informal markets. Drawing on diverse Muslims seek to demonstrate that they are The Funeral Industry in Contemporary Japan methodologies – multisited fieldwork, capable of modernizing without the Hikaru Suzuki linguistic analysis, and archival research – guidance or assistance of the state. In so the contributors demonstrate how women doing, they challenge one of the Looks at funerals as an urban business, and the move between and knit together household fundamental roles the Chinese Communist progressive commercialization of what once and marketplace activities. Exploring the government has claimed for itself, that of were primarily religious rituals. Through study cultural identities and economic practices guide and purveyor of modernity. of funerals, undertakers, and mourners, this of women traders in ten diverse locales – book examines the role of funeral companies ‘For Muslims in China, eating is a political in shaping and changing an important Bolivia, Ghana, Hungary, India, Indonesia, act, and this book, the most detailed and Mexico, Morocco, Nicaragua, Peru, and aspect of Japanese culture and society. comprehensive study of a Muslim 2001 216 x 138 mm 180pp 15 half-tones the Philippines – the authors pay special community in China to date, explains why. 0 8047 3561 1 Hardback c. £19.95 attention to the effects of global forces, In a society that views pork and secularism Publication May 2001 national economic policies, and as the norm, to be a Muslim can be a Stanford nongovernmental organizations on challenging if not impossible endeavor. The women’s participation in the market and book shows how a small minority can The Heart is Unknown Country the domestic sector. The authors also survive and maintain its values in the face Love in the Changing Economy of North-East consider the impact that women’s of frequent intolerance by the dominant Brazil economic and political activities have on culture. It also translates the fascinating L. A. Rebhun state policy, on the attitudes of different details of the lives of Chinese Muslims into Yale University, Connecticut sectors of society toward female traders, larger modern problems facing Men and women in Northeast Brazil talk and on the dynamics of the market itself. A communities across the globe.’ about their love lives with wit and passion. final theme focuses on the cultural Dru C. Gladney, Asia-Pacific Center Forthright and articulate about their dimension of mediation. 2001 216 x 138 mm 294pp 20 half-tones motivations and experiences, the informants ‘This book is a diverse yet surprisingly 2 tables 2 maps demonstrate how men and women view 0 8047 3694 4 Hardback £35.00 comprehensive examination of women’s conjugal relationships very differently, and experiences as traders in different A History of Everyday Things the author is able to specify and explore anthropological settings. The analytic The Birth of Consumption in France, these differences in unusually interesting ways. traditions used vary, but what unites the 1600–1800 ‘This is an extremely important piece of essays is that the authors’ overall concern is Daniel Roche work that is lively and original. It is a to show how gender ideologies and University of Paris substantial addition to the body of women’s market participation interact in Translated by Brian Pearce anthropological literature devoted to the ways that we have scarcely understood until Daniel Roche examines the birth of the cross-cultural study of emotion and now.’ sentiment. It also makes a significant Susan Russell, Northern Illinois University consumer society using insights from economics, culture, politics, demography contribution to the broader 2001 228 x 152 mm 11 half-tones interdisciplinary literature on romantic 0 8047 4052 6 Hardback £35.00 and geography, as well as his extensive 0 8047 4053 4 Paperback £12.95 historical knowledge. He offers a well- love, here systematically laying out, Publication June 2001 crafted overview of an impressive body of situating, and contextualizing a rendition social, cultural and economic history, of ‘love’ in a non-European, non-North placing familiar objects in their wider American setting. The book is engaging, historical and anthropological contexts. often funny, and difficult to put down.’ 2000 228 x 152 mm 320pp Donna Goldstein, University of Colorado, 0 521 63329 X Hardback £42.50 Boulder 0 521 63359 1 Paperback £15.95 1999 228 x 152 mm 312pp 18 half-tones 0 8047 3601 4 Hardback £35.00 Sociology and Cultural Studies 35

Stanford Stanford Forthcoming A Room Full of Mirrors Back to Middletown High School Reunions in Middle America The Unfinished Revolution Three Generations of Sociological Reflections Keiko Ikeda Social Movement Theory and the Gay and Rita Caccamo 1999 216 x 138 mm 220pp 3 half-tones Lesbian Movement Università degli Studi di Roma ‘Tor Vergata’ 0 8047 3435 6 Hardback £24.95 Stephen M. Engel A fresh look at the ‘Middletown’ saga from Risk and Sociocultural Theory This book compares the post-Second the Lynd’s original studies, to the associated New Directions and Perspectives World War histories of the American and secondary literature. Material from Edited by Deborah Lupton British gay and lesbian movements. The previously unknown sources sheds new 1999 228 x 152 mm 201pp two case study chapters function as brief 0 521 64207 8 Hardback £40.00 light on the initial project and the book 0 521 64554 9 Paperback £14.95 historical sketches which provide an takes up questions that reflect the introduction to British and American gay contemporary contradictions and Communicating Emotion and lesbian history. An appendix provides a dissonances in the American social fabric. Social, Moral, and Cultural Processes useful evaluative summary to social Sally Planalp 2000 216 x 138 mm 176pp movement theories. 0 8047 3493 3 Hardback £35.00 Studies in Emotion and Social Interaction 1999 228 x 152 mm 313pp Cambridge Cultural Social Studies New 0 521 55315 6 Hardback £40.00 2001 228 x 152 mm c.239pp 11 line diagrams 0 521 55741 0 Paperback £14.95 4 tables Politics after Television 0 521 80287 3 Hardback c. £40.00 Hindu Nationalism and the Reshaping of the Antisocial Behavior by Young People 0 521 00377 6 Paperback c. £14.95 Public in India A Major New Review Publication July 2001 Arvind Rajagopal Michael Rutter Henri Giller New New York University and Ann Hagell Rethinking Comparative Cultural The broadcast on Indian national television Policy Research Bureau Sociology in January 1987 of the Hindu epic The 1998 228 x 152 mm 496pp 27 line diagrams 13 tables Repertoires of Evaluation in France and the Ramayana sparked the largest political 0 521 64157 8 Hardback £40.00 United States campaign in post-independence times, led 0 521 64608 1 Paperback £14.95 Edited by Michèle Lamont by Hindu nationalists. Arvind Rajagopal’s Princeton University, New Jersey book analyses this extraordinary series of Emotions across Languages and Cultures Diversity and Universals and Laurent Thévenot events. This book will interest scholars of Anna Wierzbicka Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales politics, sociology, religion, media, and Studies in Emotion and Social Interaction South Asian studies. This book provides a powerful new 1999 228 x 152 mm 361pp 8 half-tones theoretical framework for understanding ‘A theoretically rich and sophisticated 0 521 59042 6 Hardback £42.50 0 521 59971 7 Paperback £15.95 cross-national cultural differences. Focusing contribution to the development of on France and America, researchers from transnational cultural studies in which the Textbook Series both countries analyse varying attitudes on comparisons do not always have to start Inspection copies available a diverse range of topics from racism and from the assumed baseline of European- sexual harrassment to identity politics, American cultural experience. This analysis publishing, journalism, the arts and the of the heady mix of communalism, Cambridge Cultural environment. nationalism, market liberalism and Cambridge Cultural Social Studies consumerism in the case of recent Indian Social Studies 2000 228 x 152 mm 392pp 9 tables experience is replete with illuminating Series Editors: Jeffrey C. Alexander 0 521 78263 5 Hardback £42.50 parallels for the study of the cultural University of California, Los Angeles 0 521 78794 7 Paperback £15.95 dynamics of other sectors of the emerging Steven Seidman global marketplace.’ State University of New York, Albany New David Morley, Goldsmith’s College, Cambridge Cultural Social Studies is a Thinking through Television University of London forum for the most original and thoughtful Ron Lembo 2001 228 x 152 mm 325pp work in cultural social studies. This Amherst College, Massachusetts 0 521 64053 9 Hardback £42.50 includes theoretical works focusing on 0 521 64839 4 Paperback £15.95 Investigating American television viewing conceptual strategies, empirical studies habits as a distinct cultural form this book Placing Friendship in Context covering specific topics such as gender, is based on an empirical study of the day- Edited by Rebecca G. Adams sexuality, politics, economics, social to-day use of television by working people and Graham Allan movements, and crime, and studies that and develops a unique theoretical approach Structural Analysis in the Social Sciences, 15 address broad themes such as the culture of to explore the way in which people give 1999 228 x 152 mm 224pp 2 figures modernity. While the perspectives of the meaning to their viewing practices. 0 521 58456 6 Hardback £40.00 individual studies will vary, they will all 0 521 58589 9 Paperback £14.95 Cambridge Cultural Social Studies share the same innovative reach and Ageing and Popular Culture 2000 228 x 152 mm 270pp scholarly quality. 0 521 58465 5 Hardback £35.00 Andrew Blaikie 0 521 58577 5 Paperback £12.95 1999 228 x 152 mm 260pp 8 half-tones 0 521 55150 1 Hardback £42.50 0 521 64547 6 Paperback £15.95

Visit our website at uk.cambridge.org 36 Sociology and Cultural Studies

New New New Intellectual Discourse and the Struggles for Subjectivity A Phenomenology of Working- Politics of Modernization Identity, Action and Youth Experience Class Experience Negotiating Modernity in Iran Kevin McDonald Simon J. Charlesworth Ali Mirsepassi University of Melbourne University of Cambridge Hampshire College, Amherst, Massachusetts This book examines the urgent social and This book examines the effects of poverty Ali Mirsepassi explores Eurocentric cultural questions faced by young people and class through the personal testimony of assumptions about modernity and Islamic today. Struggles for Subjectivity is not only the people living in the industrial area of Fundamentalism. He argues the Iranian about young people, but explores forms of Rotherham in South Yorkshire, England. It Revolution was not a clash between crisis and struggle increasingly evident in argues that the themes and problems modernity and tradition but an attempt to advanced societies at the beginning of the identified in this book will be familiar to accommodate modernity within a sense of millennium. marginalized groups everywhere. authentic Islamic identity and culture and Cambridge Cultural Social Studies ‘An exemplary study of contemporary assesses the future of secularism and 2000 228 x 152 mm 246pp 2 line diagrams working-class life … intense and affecting.’ democracy in the Middle East. 0 521 66279 6 Hardback £42.50 0 521 66446 2 Paperback £15.95 Sociology Cambridge Cultural Social Studies Cambridge Cultural Social Studies 2000 228 x 152 mm 241pp 5 tables New 1999 228 x 152 mm 324pp 0 521 65000 3 Hardback £40.00 0 521 65066 6 Hardback £42.50 0 521 65997 3 Paperback £14.95 Trust 0 521 65915 9 Paperback £15.95 A Sociological Theory New Piotr Sztompka New Race, Media and the Crisis of Civil Jagiellonian University, Krakow Distant Suffering Society Piotr Sztompka presents a comprehensive Morality, Media and Politics From the Watts Riots to Rodney King theoretical account of trust, explaining its Luc Boltanski Ronald N. Jacobs meaning, foundations and functions. Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Paris State University of New York, Albany Professor Sztompka supports his claims What is the morally acceptable response to with an impressive empirical study of trust, The first comprehensive account of the images of starving children, bombed carried out in post-communist Poland. development of the African-American Press villages and mass graves brought to us by Trust: A Sociological Theory is a major work in New York, Chicago and Los Angeles, television? Luc Boltanski discusses the ways of social theory. this book compares ‘mainstream’ and in which spectators have tried to respond African-American media coverage of racial Cambridge Cultural Social Studies to what they have seen and asks if there crises such as the Watts riot, Rodney King, 2000 228 x 152 mm 226pp 12 figures remains a place for pity in modern politics. the LA uprisings and the O. J. Simpson 0 521 59144 9 Hardback £42.50 Cambridge Cultural Social Studies trial. 0 521 59850 8 Paperback £15.95 1999 228 x 152 mm 264pp Cambridge Cultural Social Studies New 0 521 57389 0 Hardback £42.50 2000 228 x 152 mm 202pp 0 521 65953 1 Paperback £15.95 0 521 62360 X Hardback £37.50 Fundamentalism, Sectarianism, 0 521 62578 5 Paperback £13.95 and Revolution New The Jacobin Dimension of Modernity New Identity without Selfhood S. N. Eisenstadt Simone de Beauvoir and Bisexuality Hebrew University of Jerusalem Theorizing the Standoff Mariam Fraser Contingency in Action A major comparative analysis of Loughborough University Robin Wagner-Pacifici fundamentalist movements in historical Swarthmore College, Pennsylvania Examining how de Beauvoir is constructed and cultural context, spanning as an intelligible self by academics, This book combines original theoretical revolutionary France, America and Japan, biographers and the media, Mariam Fraser analysis with real life case studies to with an emphasis on the contemporary proposes an original conception of identity examine the nature of the standoff. The scene. The central theme is the Jacobin and subjectivity in the context of recent author explores the archetypal patterns of nature of modern fundamentalist post-structuralist and queer debates and human action and cognition that move us movements, with their ambivalence argues that attempts to ‘deconstruct’ into and out of these highly charged towards tradition and the surprisingly identity founder on Western concepts such situations and seeks to theorize the progressive role they sometimes play. as individuality. contingency of all such moments. Cambridge Cultural Social Studies Cambridge Cultural Social Studies 2000 228 x 152 mm 294pp Cambridge Cultural Social Studies 1999 228 x 152 mm 226pp 0 521 64184 5 Hardback £42.50 2000 228 x 152 mm 292pp 0 521 62357 X Hardback £45.00 0 521 64586 7 Paperback £15.95 0 521 65244 8 Hardback £42.50 0 521 62579 3 Paperback £16.95 0 521 65479 3 Paperback £15.95 Biological Anthropology 37

Biological Forthcoming Hominoid Evolution and Climatic Anthropology Hominoid Evolution and Climatic Change in Europe Change in Europe Volume 1: The Evolution of Neogene Terrestrial Phylogeny of the Neogene Hominoid Ecosystems in Europe New Primates of Eurasia Edited by Jorge Agustí Hunter-Gatherers Volume 2 Institut de Paleontologia M. Crusafont, Sabadell, Spain An Interdisciplinary Perspective Edited by Louis de Bonis Lorenzo Rook Edited by Catherine Panter-Brick Université de Poitiers Università di Firenze University of Durham George D. Koufos and Peter Andrews Robert Layton University of Thessaloniki, Greece The Natural History Museum, London University of Durham and Peter Andrews Major changes have occurred in the climate and Peter Rowley-Conwy Natural History Museum, London of Europe and the Mediterranean in the University of Durham past 20 million years. This unique books looks at this climatic history in relation to hominoid evolution, and provides a coherent image of climate change during this period for anyone interested in human evolution. 1999 228 x 152 mm 528pp 77 line diagrams 10 half-tones 38 tables 0 521 64097 0 Hardback £70.00

Forthcoming Second Nature Economic Origins of Human Evolution Haim Ofek State University of New York, Binghamton

What is the place of Europe in the origin Analyses of the ecology, biology and society of humankind? Whilst our earliest human of past and present-day hunter-gatherers ancestors may have come out of Africa, are at the core of this interdisciplinary many of our more recent ancestors, and volume. Since the seminal work of Man the those of other primates, left their fossil Hunter in 1968, new research in these remains in Europe and the Near East. three areas has become increasingly Hominoid primates including Dryopithecus specialised, and the lines of communication in Spain and Hungary, Oreopithecus in Italy between academic disciplines have all but and Ouranopithecus in Greece flourished in broken down. This volume aims to re- the Miocene, between about 10–7 million establish an interdisciplinary debate, years ago. This volume examines these and presenting critical issues commanding an other hominoid fossils found in Eurasia ongoing interest in hunter-gatherer and discusses what we can learn from them research, covering evolution and history, using biostratigraphic and ecological frameworks. In addition, new methods of demography and biology, technology, social Was exchange an early agent of human analysing and visualising fossil hominoids organisation, art and language of diverse evolution or is it merely an artifact of are explored, including CT-based and groups. As a reference text, this book will modern civilisation? Spanning two million computer-assisted virtual reconstruction of be useful to scholars and students of social years of human evolution, this book fossils to allow three-dimensional images of anthropology, archaeology, biological explores the impact of economics on external and internal morphology of even anthropology and human sciences. human evolution and natural history. The fragmentary or distorted fossils. This Contributors: Catherine Panter-Brick, theory of evolution by natural selection has volume will therefore be invaluable for Robert H. Layton, Peter Rowley-Conwy, always relied in part on progress in areas of practising palaeoanthropologists and Bruce Winterhalder, Robin Torrence, science outside biology. By applying palaeontologists whatever their specialism. Steven L. Kuhn, Mary C. Stiner, Patrick economic principles at the borderlines of 2001 228 x 152 mm 376pp 67 line diagrams McConvell, Renee Pennington, Mark 40 half-tones 37 tables biology, Haim Ofek shows how some of Jenike, Alain Froment, Margaret W. 0 521 66075 0 Hardback £60.00 the outstanding issues in human evolution, Conkey Publication April 2001 such as the increase in human brain size Biosocial Society Symposium Series and the expansion of the environmental 2001 228 x 152 mm 352pp 23 line diagrams niche humans occupied, can be answered. 16 tables He identifies distinct economic forces at 0 521 77210 9 Hardback £60.00 work, beginning with the transition from 0 521 77672 4 Paperback £20.95 Publication March 2001 the feed-as-you-go strategy of primates, through hunter-gathering and the domestication of fire to the development of agriculture. This highly readable book will

For monthly email alerts visit uk.cambridge.org/cais 38 Biological Anthropology inform and intrigue general readers and Contributors: Peter Hammerstein, Elinor Contributors: Peter Carruthers, Andrew those in fields such as evolutionary biology Ostrom, Charles L. Nunn, Rebecca J. Chamberlain, Richard Samuels, Claire and psychology, economics, and Lewis, Jan A. R. A. M. van Hooff, Ronald Hughes, Robert Plomin, Dominic Murphy, anthropology. Noë, Louise Barrett, Peter S. Henzi, Stephen Stich, Pascal Boyer, Gloria Origgi, 2001 228 x 152 mm 200pp 12 line diagrams Redouan Bshary, Jason D. Hoeksema, Dan Sperber, David Papineau, Steven 3 half-tones 1 table Mark W. Schwartz, Boguslaw Pawlowski, Mithen, Adam Morton, Robin Dunbar, 0 521 62399 5 Hardback c. £45.00 0 521 62534 3 Paperback c. £16.95 Robin I. M. Dunbar, Andrew Jim Hopkins Publication September 2001 Pomiankowski, Yoh Iwasa, Geoffrey A. 2000 228 x 152 mm 345pp 3 half-tones Parker, Mike A. Ball 34 figures 0 521 78331 3 Hardback £40.00 Forthcoming 2001 228 x 152 mm 295pp 41 line diagrams 0 521 78908 7 Paperback £14.95 Economics in Nature 1 half-tone 9 tables 0 521 65014 3 Hardback c. £55.00 Social Dilemmas, Mate Choice and Biological Publication August 2001 New in Paperback Markets Figments of Reality Forthcoming Edited by Ronald Noë The Evolution of the Curious Mind Université Louis Pasteur, Strasbourg Biology of Plagues Ian Stewart Jan A. R. A. M. van Hooff Evidence from Historical Populations University of Warwick Universiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands Susan Scott and Jack Cohen and Peter Hammerstein University of Liverpool University of Warwick Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin and Christopher J. Duncan Bestselling authors Ian Stewart and Jack University of Liverpool Cohen return with an exhilarating and The threat of unstoppable plagues, such as entertaining exploration of how mind, AIDS and Ebola, is always with us. In language and culture evolved. Providing a Europe, the most devastating plagues were fresh outlook on these topical questions, those from the Black Death pandemic in they develop new and intriguing insights the 1300s to the Great Plague of London into the nature of evolution, science and in 1665. For the last 100 years, it has been humanity. accepted that Yersinia pestis, the infective From reviews of the hardback: agent of bubonic plague, was responsible for these epidemics. This book combines ‘One of the most heartening and modern concepts of epidemiology and innovative books of the year.’ molecular biology with computer- John Cornwell, The Sunday Times modelling. Applying these to the analysis of ‘[a] provocative, ambitious and enjoyable historical epidemics, the authors show that attempt to ask and answer some of the they were not, in fact, outbreaks of most interesting Big Questions of modern bubonic plague. Biology of Plagues offers a science and philosophy.’ Since the development of game theory, the completely new interdisciplinary New Scientist analysis of animal behaviour using the interpretation of the plagues of Europe and 1999 228 x 152 mm 340pp 35 line diagrams 0 521 66383 0 Paperback £10.50 theories of economics has become a establishes them within a geographical, historical and demographic framework. Also available growing field of biological research in 0 521 57155 3 Hardback £19.95 which models of games and markets play This fascinating detective work will be of an important role. Studies of sexual interest to readers in the social and Death, Hope and Sex biological sciences, and lessons learnt will selection, interspecific mutualism and Steps to an Evolutionary Ecology of Mind intraspecific cooperation show that underline the implications of historical and Morality individuals exchange commodities to their plagues for modern-day epidemiology. James S. Chisholm 2001 228 x 152 mm 437pp 121 line diagrams University of Western Australia, Perth mutual benefit; the exchange values of 18 tables commodities are a source of conflict, and 0 521 80150 8 Hardback £65.00 ‘Chisholm, an expert on child behavioural mechanisms such as partner Publication March 2001 development, an evolutionist, and a choice and contest between competitors New humanist, provides a much needed bridge determines the composition of trading between the disparate and often warring pairs or groups. These ‘biological markets’ Evolution and the Human Mind worlds of developmental psychology, can be examined to gain a better Edited by Peter Carruthers cultural studies and evolutionary theory. understanding of the underlying principles University of Sheffield This beautifully conceived, well-researched of evolutionary ecology. In this volume and Andrew Chamberlain and very thoughtful book deserves a broad scientists from different disciplines University of Sheffield audience.’ combine insights from economics, How did our minds evolve? Can Sarah Blaffer Hrdy, author of The Woman evolutionary biology and the social sciences evolutionary considerations illuminate the that Never Evolved and Mother Nature to look at comparative aspects of economic question of the basic architecture of the 1999 228 x 152 mm 310pp 8 line diagrams behaviour in humans and other animals. human mind? These are two of the main 2 tables Aimed primarily at evolutionary biologists 0 521 59281 X Hardback £55.00 questions addressed in Evolution and the 0 521 59708 0 Paperback £19.95 and anthropologists, it will also appeal to Human Mind by a distinguished psychologists and economists interested in interdisciplinary team of philosophers, an evolutionary approach. psychologists, anthropologists and archaeologists. Biological Anthropology 39

New the journal also includes a Debate section New which encourages readers’ comments on Companion Animals and Us specific articles, with subsequent response Human Paleobiology Exploring the Relationships between People from the original author. JBS is truly Robert B. Eckhardt and Pets international both in terms of geographical Pennsylvania State University Edited by Anthony L. Podberscek areas covered and its contributors. Its University of Cambridge reputation for high quality and outstanding Elizabeth S. Paul scholarship has made it into one of the University of Bristol leading journals in the area of biosocial and James A. Serpell science. University of Pennsylvania Subscriptions Pets are kept in over half of all households Volume 33 in 2001: January, April, in western societies. But why do we keep July and October pets? Are they good for our health? Did Subscriptions print plus electronic: £96 Biosocial Society, Galton Institute: £30 our ancestors keep pets too? This book British Society for Population Studies, Society for the explores our complex relationship with pets Study of Human Biology, International Association of and will interest graduate students, Human Biologists: £46 ISSN 0021-9320 researchers and general readers in many subjects. Cambridge Studies in ‘ … a good overview of the relationship between people and pets. As an excellent Biological and reference source for the most recent Evolutionary Human Paleobiology explores the literature on the subject, it invites you to Anthropology adaptability and variation in past and pursue specific interests further.’ present human populations under a range Animal Welfare Series Editors: Dr C.G.N. Masie-Taylor of changing environmental conditions. 2000 228 x 152 mm 348pp 20 line diagrams University of Cambridge 21 half-tones 24 tables Dr R.A. Foley Using a historical approach emphasizing 0 521 63113 0 Hardback £52.50 University of Cambridge phenotypic features instead of complex Professor Nina Jablonski taxonomy, it will be a stimulating and New California Academy of Sciences challenging read for all those interested in Infertility in the Modern World Professor Karen Strier human paleobiology, evolutionary biology Edited by Gillian R. Bentley University of Winsconsin and anthropology. University of Cambridge Professor Michael Little Cambridge Studies in Biological and and C. G. N. Mascie-Taylor State University of New York Evolutionary Anthropology, 26 University of Cambridge Professor Kenneth M. Weiss 2000 228 x 152 mm 368pp 6 tables 0 521 45160 4 Hardback £52.50 Medical, environmental and social changes The Cambridge Studies in Biological and have all profoundly affected human Evolutionary Anthropology is an established Human Growth in the Past reproduction. This book discusses some of series, very much at the forefront of recent Studies from Bones and Teeth the more dramatic changes in an accessible developments in human biology and Edited by Robert D. Hoppa manner, illustrating the ways in which evolution. The intention of the series is to University of Manitoba, Canada human biology and culture can affect provide a broad and integrated approach to and Charles M. FitzGerald fertility and providing a unique biological anthropology. Books in the series McMaster University, Canada interdisciplinary perspective on the subject. are either edited or written by one or two Interdisciplinary analysis of human growth Biosocial Society Symposium Series, 12 authors. Each provides a concise and in past populations. 2000 228 x 152 mm 276pp 4 line diagrams balanced account, ideally of around 250 Cambridge Studies in Biological and 19 tables 4 figures pages, that synthesizes the current research 0 521 64364 3 Hardback £42.50 Evolutionary Anthropology, 25 0 521 64387 2 Paperback £15.95 and thinking in its subject area, aimed at 1999 228 x 152 mm 333pp 42 line diagrams advanced undergraduate and graduate 29 half-tones 19 tables Journal students, as well as researchers and teachers 0 521 63153 X Hardback £47.50 of biological anthropology. Journal of Biosocial Science Migration and Colonization in C. G. N. Massie-Taylor Human Microevolution University of Oxford Alan Fix Journal of Biosocial Science is a leading University of California, Riverside interdisciplinary and international journal Integrative approach linking the causes of in the field of biosocial science, the migration to genetic consequences for common ground between biology and human evolution. sociology. It acts as an essential reference guide for all biological and social scientists Cambridge Studies in Biological and Evolutionary Anthropology, 24 working in these interdisciplinary areas, 1999 228 x 152 mm 354pp 32 line diagrams including social and biological aspects of 16 tables reproduction and its control, gerontology, 0 521 59206 2 Hardback £42.50 ecology, genetics, applied psychology, sociology, education, criminology, demography, health and epidemiology. Publishing original research papers, short reports, reviews, lectures and book reviews,

Visit our anthropology website at www.cambridge.org/anthropology 40 Also of Interest

New Edition Forthcoming in Paperback New Patterns of Human Growth Aristocratic Encounters The Transformation of Nomadic Second edition European Travelers and North American Society in the Arab East Indians Barry Bogin Edited by Martha Mundy University of Michigan, Dearborn Harry Liebersohn London School of Economics and Political Science University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign This comprehensively revised and updated and Basim Musallam new edition of a successful undergraduate Relates how an aristocratic discourse on University of Cambridge text provides an integrated anthropological, American Indians took shape in the late The editors bring together an international evolutionary and biocultural approach to eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. team of contributors offering a the study of human growth and Titled and educated European visitors to multidisciplinary approach to the evolution development. Its distinctive style and North America, with the background of of nomadic society. The chapters document coverage will ensure that it continues as the the French Revolution in mind, developed the longue-durée of history alongside the primary text in the field. a new belief in their affinity with the rapid transformations of the twentieth Cambridge Studies in Biological and warrior elites of Indian societies. century. This is an accessible and Evolutionary Anthropology, 23 2001 228 x 152 mm 192pp 17 half-tones 0 521 00360 1 Paperback £12.95 interactive book which will attract readers 1999 228 x 152 mm 470pp 93 line diagrams Publication April 2001 from a variety of disciplines. 2 half-tones 12 tables 0 521 56438 7 Paperback £25.95 University of Cambridge Oriental Publications, New in Paperback from Stanford 58 New in Paperback Cadres and Kin 2000 228 x 152 mm 264pp 22 figures Bioarchaeology Making a Socialist Village in West China, 0 521 77057 2 Hardback £35.00 1921–1991 Interpreting Behavior from the Human Forthcoming Skeleton Gregory A. Ruf Commanding Right and Clark Spencer Larsen State University of New York, Stony Brook This book examines relationships between Forbidding Wrong in Islamic ‘Bioarchaeology is a valuable addition to the Thought Cambridge Studies in Biological social organization, politics, and economy Michael Cook Anthropology series. This book presents a during the twentieth century. Offering a Princeton University, New Jersey refreshing and positive view of the value of wealth of empirical data on township and skeletal and dental research. Bioarchaeology village life during the pre-Communist era, provides a comprehensive reference the decades of collectivism, and the present resource for biological anthropologists, era, Ruf explores the development of a archaeologists and a wide audience local state regime he calls managerial concerned with the biology and behaviour corporatism. 2001 228 x 152 mm 272pp 12 half-tones of our ancestors.’ 3 tables 6 figures 5 maps C. A. Marlow, Annals of Human Biology 0 8047 4129 8 Paperback £12.95 Cambridge Studies in Biological and Also available Evolutionary Anthropology, 21 0 8047 3377 5 Hardback £37.50 1999 228 x 152 mm 474pp 26 line diagrams 45 half-tones 16 tables 60 figures New in Paperback 0 521 65834 9 Paperback £25.95 Caste, Society and Politics in India from the Eighteenth Century to the Modern Age Also of Interest Susan Bayly University of Cambridge Forthcoming from Stanford Adopting an historical and anthropological What kind of duty do we have to try to Exile to Paradise approach, the book seeks to account for the stop others doing wrong? The question Savagery and Civilization in Paris and the development and persistence of India’s is intelligible in just about any culture, South Pacific, 1790–1900 caste system over 350 years. Unlike many but few of them seek to answer it in a Alice Bullard studies of the subject which are highly rigorous fashion. The most striking Georgia Institute of Technology polemical or too technical for non- exception is found in the Islamic This book is a history of penal colonization specialists, this volume is intended for a tradition where ‘commanding right and and a multi-cultural history of ‘the self’ student and general market. forbidding wrong’ is a central moral and civilization. It rewrites the French ‘The book is extraordinary in the diversity tenet. Michael Cook’s comprehensive civilizing mission from the perspective of of themes that it handles and the and compelling analysis represents the the exiled Paris Communards of 1871, and chronological span it covers. … What first sustained attempt to chart the the Melanesian Kanak among whom they emerges is an extraordinarily nuanced history of Islamic reflection on this lived in New Caledonia. understanding of caste that satisfies the obligation and to explain its relevance 2001 228 x 152 mm 416pp 11 half-tones 1 map for politics and ideology in the 0 8047 3878 5 Hardback £40.00 historian and provokes the social Publication March 2001 anthropologist.’ contemporary Islamic world. Dr Seema Alavi, The Book Review 2001 228 x 152 mm 720pp 0 521 66174 9 Hardback £54.95 The New Cambridge History of India 2001 228 x 152 mm 440pp 12 half-tones 3 maps 0 521 79842 6 Paperback £16.95 Also available 0 521 26434 0 Hardback £40.00 Also of Interest 41

Textbook organizations in development. Edelman’s range of post-colonial theory, this book analysis of development theory and its should be of interest to scholars in Irish New Edition critics is a brilliant contribution, which studies, post-colonial studies, and Transformations in Slavery might put an end to some of the Modernism. A History of Slavery in Africa nonsensical and even dangerous notions 2001 228 x 152 mm 313pp that have recently gained the status of 0 521 79319 X Hardback £40.00 Second edition Publication April 2001 Paul E. Lovejoy received wisdom. He brings to bear the York University, Ontario results of two decades of fieldwork in New in Paperback various Costa Rican settings, making the This history of African slavery from the Edward S. Curtis and the North best possible case for the simple idea that fifteenth to the early twentieth century American Indian, Incorporated theory is supposed to have at least examines how indigenous African slavery something to do with empirical reality.’ Mick Gidley developed within an international context. Judith Adler Hellman, University of York University of Leeds The new edition incorporates recent 2000 228 x 152 mm 333pp 18 half-tones 1 map ‘Gidley’s work on Curtis is cutting-edge, research, revised statistics on the slave trade 0 8047 3401 1 Hardback £40.00 based on a thorough examination of demography, and an updated bibliography. 0 8047 3693 6 Paperback £17.95 archival sources that will delight and African Studies, 100 New Textbook enlighten scholars interested in popular 2000 228 x 152 mm 352pp 29 tables 6 maps culture, history, anthropology, and 0 521 78012 8 Hardback £45.00 The Women of Colonial Latin 0 521 78430 1 Paperback £16.95 photography. Although others have written America about the work of Curtis, Gidley provides New from Stanford Susan Migden Socolow the definitive work.’ Dreaming of Gold, Dreaming of Emory University, Atlanta Clifford Trafzer, University of California, Home This book presents an overview of the varied Berkeley Transnationalism and Migration between the experiences of women in colonial Spanish Cambridge Studies in American Literature and United States and South China, 1882–1943 and Portuguese America. Tracing the effects Culture, 119 Madeline Yuan-yin Hsu of conquest, colonization, and settlement on 2000 228 x 152 mm 342pp 22 half-tones 0 521 77573 6 Paperback £15.95 San Francisco State University colonial women, the book examines the This study of immigration from southern expectations, responsibilities, and limitations New China to California reveals how individuals facing women of differing racial, social, economic, and occupational groups. Visuality before and beyond the raised in rural communities and separated Renaissance from their families and villages interacted Contents: 1. Iberian women in the Old with an industrializing Western world and World and the New; 2. Before Columbus: Edited by Robert Nelson University of Chicago used their income from menial and women in indigenous America and Africa; domestic employment to advance their 3. Conquest and colonization; 4. The Examines the phenomenon of ‘seeing’ families socially. arrival of Iberian women; 5. Women, through a study of art works from Mesopotamia, China, Africa and Europe. It ‘A work of impressive scholarship, there is marriage, and family; 6. Elite women; 7. The demonstrates that the act of seeing has new and important information on almost ‘Brides of Christ’ and other religious been understood in diverse ways with every page of this book. It will be required women; 8. Women and work; 9. Women consequences for the production of art, the reading for Asian Americanists, and slavery; 10. Women and social practice of religion, and the perception of immigration historians, students of deviance: crime, witchcraft, and rebellion; world and self. transnationalism and diaspora, and social 11. Women and Enlightenment reform. historians of twentieth-century China.’ New Approaches to the Americas Cambridge Studies in New Art History and Robert G. Lee, Brown University 2000 228 x 152 mm 252pp 12 half-tones Criticism 0 521 47052 8 Hardback £32.50 2000 253 x 177 mm 286pp 51 half-tones Asian America 0 521 47642 9 Paperback £11.95 0 521 65222 7 Hardback £52.50 2001 228 x 152 mm 296pp 1 line diagram 16 half-tones 14 tables 2 maps New A New Order of Things 0 8047 3814 9 Hardback £27.50 Property, Power, and the Transformation of the The Vanishing Rouble Creek Indians, 1733–1816 New from Stanford Barter Networks and Non-Monetary Claudio Saunt Peasants against Globalization Transactions in Post-Soviet Societies Studies in North American Indian History Edited by Paul Seabright Rural Social Movements in Costa Rica 1999 228 x 152 mm 312pp 4 half-tones 1 table University of Toulouse 2 maps Marc Edelman 0 521 66043 2 Hardback £37.50 Hunter College, City University of New York An accZ`olai Ssorin-Chaikov 0 521 66943 X Paperback £13.95 2000 228 x 152 mm 401pp 20 tables 30 figures Costa Rican peasants in the early 1980s 0 521 79037 9 Hardback £50.00 fought cutbacks in social programs, and 0 521 79542 7 Paperback £17.95 emerge not as unsophisticated rustics but as worldly and outspoken activists. This book Forthcoming questions current theories of collective action, Modernism and the Celtic Revival development, and ethnographic research, Gregory Castle inviting us to come face-to-face with Arizona State University peasants stubbornly committed to survival. Gregory Castle examines the impact of ‘This beautifully written book is of great anthropology on the work of Irish theoretical importance for social movement Revivalists such as W. B. Yeats, John M. theory and peasant studies, as well as for Synge and James Joyce. Drawing on a wide understanding the impact of neoliberalism in Latin America and the role of grassroots

For monthly email alerts visit uk.cambridge.org/cais 42 Index

A Bentley, Gillian R., 39 Cognitive Theory of Cultural Meaning, A, 27 Abandoned Children, 23 Between Mecca and Beijing, 34 Cohen, Ada, 13 Abandonment of Settlements and Regions, The, 10 Beyond Chiefdoms, 10 Cohen, Jack, 38 Accounting for Tastes, 34 Bilinguality and Bilingualism, 32 Coins and Power in Late Iron Age Britain, 9 Adams, Rebecca G., 35 Bioarchaeology, 40 Collapse of Complex Societies, The, 9 Adams, Richard E. W., 15 Biocultural Approaches to the Emotions, 27 Commanding Right and Forbidding Wrong in Adams, Vincanne, 28 Biology of Plagues, 38 Islamic Thought, 40 Aegean Bronze Age, The, 8 Birth of the Gods and the Origins of Agriculture, Communicating Emotion, 35 African Archaeology, 8 The, 9 Community Participation in Health, 28 African Civilizations, 18 Blaikie, Andrew, 35 Companion Animals and Us, 39 Africans, 5 Blanc, Michel H. A., 32 Connah, Graham, 18 After Nature, 29 Blanton, Richard, 6 Conrad, Geoffrey W., 9 Ageing and Popular Culture, 35 Blanton, Richard E., 9 Contingent Countryside, 22 Agustí, Jorge, 37 Bloch, Maurice, 29 Cook, Michael, 40 Aitchison, Jean, 31 Bogin, Barry, 40 Corpus of Mycenaean Inscriptions from Knossos, 14 Alcock, Susan E., 1 Boltanski, Luc, 36 Cowan, Jane K., 20 Alexander Mosaic, The, 13 Bonis, Louis de, 37 Crawford, Harriet E. W., 5 Allan, Graham, 35 Border Identities, 25 Creation of Modern Athens, The, 13 Allchin, Briget, 7 Bowen, John, 25 Creighton, John, 9 Allchin, Raymond, 7 Bowerman, Melissa, 32 Cribb, Roger, 9 Alluvial Geoarchaeology, 11 Brewer, Douglas J., 3 Critical Comparisons in Politics and Culture, 25 An Anthropology for Contemporaneous Worlds, 25 British Natural History Museum, 5 Crittenden, Patricia McKinsey, 32 An Ethnography of the Neolithic, 9 Brodwin, Paul, 28 Crystal, David, 30, 31 An Introduction to Pidgins and Creoles, 32 Bronze Age of Southeast Asia, The, 8 Csordas, Thomas J., 28 An Introduction to the Anthropology of Melanesia, Broodbank, Cyprian, 12 Culture and Rights, 20 24 Brown, A. G., 11 Cultures of Relatedness, 24 An Introduction to Theory in Anthropology, 23 Bruhns, Karen Olsen, 8 Cultures under Siege, 27 An Island Archaeology of the Early Cyclades, 12 Brumfiel, Elizabeth M., 10 Curta, Florin, 16 Ancient China and its Enemies, 18 Bullard, Alice, 40 D Ancient Egyptian Materials and Technology, 3 Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African D'Altroy, Terence N., 1 Ancient Maya, The, 15 Studies, 19 Daly, Richard, 21 Ancient Mesoamerica, 9, 15 Burden of Time, The, 22 Daunton, M. J., 17 Ancient Mesopotamia, 6 C Daunton, Martin, 17 Ancient Mind, The, 10 Caccamo, Rita, 35 David, Nicholas, 7 Ancient Oaxaca, 6 Cadres and Kin, 40 Davidson, Iain, 5 Ancient South America, 8 Cambridge and the Torres Strait, 25 Death, Hope and Sex, 38 Andrefsky, Jr, William, 11 Cambridge Archaeological Journal, 5 Death in Banaras, 29 Andrews, Peter, 37 Cambridge Encyclopedia of Hunters and Death-Ritual and Social Structure in Classical Anthropological Studies of Religion, 25 Gatherers, The, 21 Antiquity, 14 Anthropology of Art, The, 25 Cambridge History of Ancient China, The, 18 Defacement, 25 Anthropology of Justice, The, 29 Cambridge History of Egypt, The, 19 DeLoache, Judy S., 22 Antiquity and its Interpreters, 14 Cambridge History of Southeast Asia, The, 18 Demarest, Arthur A., 9 Antisocial Behavior by Young People, 35 Cambridge History of the Native Peoples of the Dembour, Marie Bénédicte, 20 Appadurai, Arjun, 25 Americas, The, 15 Development of Standard English, 1300–1800, Archaeological Theory, 10 Cambridge Illustrated History of Archaeology, 2 The, 30 Archaeological Theory and Scientific Practice, 2 Cambridge Illustrated History of Prehistoric Art, Di Cosmo, Nicola, 18 Archaeology and the Social History of Ships, 4 The, 5 Diatoms, The, 19 Archaeology of Ancient Greece, The, 6 Cambridge Urban History of Britain, The, 17 Dickinson, Oliver, 8 Archaeology of Elam, The, 7 Cambrosio, Alberto, 28 Dilmun and its Gulf Neighbours, 5 Archaeology of Korea, The, 8 Cameron, Catherine M., 10 Dincauze, Dena F., 4 Archaeology of Political Structure, The, 9 Cannell, Fenella, 26 Distant Suffering, 36 Archaeology of Rank, The, 9 Carruthers, Peter, 38 Dixon, R. M. W., 32 Archaeology of Rock-Art, The, 5 Carsten, Janet, 24 Doctors for Democracy, 28 Archaeology of the Iberians, The, 16 Carter, Anthony T., 29 Documentary Archaeology in the New World, 10 Archaeology of Urban Landscapes, The, 10 Caste, Society and Politics in India from the Domestic Ceramic Production and Spatial Archetti, Eduardo P., 26 Eighteenth Century to the Modern Age, 40 Organization, 9 Architecture and Power in the Ancient Andes, 9 Castle, Gregory, 41 Donnan, Hastings, 25 Arel, Dominique, 21 Cauvin, Jacques, 9 Dorrell, Peter G., 11 Aristocratic Encounters, 40 Celtic Chiefdom, Celtic State, 10 Double Vision, 25 Arnold, Bettina, 10 Central Africans and Cultural Transformations in Dreaming of Gold, Dreaming of Home, 41 Arnold, Dean E., 9 the American Diaspora, 33 Dunbabin, Katherine, 13 Arnold III, Philip J., 9 Ceramic Theory and Cultural Process, 9 Duncan, Christopher J., 38 Art and the Early Greek State, 9 Chaco Anasazi, The, 9 Dunkerley, James, 15 Artifact and Assemblage, 14 Chadwick, John, 14 Duranti, Alessandro, 32 Athenian Acropolis, The, 13 Chamberlain, Andrew, 38 Dutton, Michael, 33 Athenian Trireme, The, 5 Charlesworth, Simon J., 36 E Aubet, Maria Eugenia, 16 Chesapeake Family and their Slaves, A, 9 Earle, Timothy, 21 Augé, Marc, 25 Children's Engagement in the World, 33 Early Ireland, 17 B China Quarterly, The, 19 Early Neolithic Greece, 7 Back to Middletown, 35 Chippindale, Christopher, 5 Eckhardt, Robert B., 39 Bad Year Economics, 10 Chisholm, James S., 38 Ecology and Ceramic Production in an Andean Bahn, Paul G., 2, 5 Churches of the Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem: A Community, 9 Barnard, Alan, 23 Corpus, The, 17 Economics in Nature, 38 Barnes, J. A., 29 City in Time and Space, The, 5 Edelman, Marc, 41 Barrett , T. H. , 19 Claassen, Cheryl, 11 Edmonds, Richard Louis, 19 Bastéa, Eleni, 13 Clark, J. Desmond, 19 Edmund Leach, 21 Bayly, Susan, 40 Clark, Peter, 17 Edward S. Curtis and the North American Indian, Beatty, Andrew, 26 Claussen, Angelika Hartl, 32 Incorporated, 41 Beaudry, Mary C., 10 Coates, J. F., 5 Egypt and the Egyptians, 3 Becoming Roman, 14 Cockburn, Eve, 3 Eisenstadt, S. N., 36 Bennett, Tony, 34 Cockburn, Thomas Aidan, 3 Embodiment and Experience, 28 Index 43

Emerging Class in Papua New Guinea, 24 Harding, A. F., 7 Language and the Internet, 30 Emery, Anthony, 17 Harms, Robert, 24 Language Death, 31 Emmison, Michael, 34 Harris, Alfred, 29 Language, Discourse and Power in African Emotions across Languages and Cultures, 35 Hawaiki, Ancestral Polynesia, 2 American Culture, 29 Empires, 1 Hawting, G. R. , 19 Language, Identity, and Marginality in Indonesia, 29 Engel, Stephen M., 35 Hazan, Haim, 29 Language Shift and Cultural Reproduction, 30 Environmental Archaeology, 4 Healing Dramas and Clinical Plots, 25 Larsen, Clark Spencer, 40 Errington, Frederick K., 24 Heart is Unknown Country, The, 34 Layton, Robert, 23, 25, 37 Errington, J. Joseph, 29 Herle, Anita, 25 Layton, Thomas N., 15 Ethnic Identity in Greek Antiquity, 14 Hertz, Ellen, 26 Lee, Richard B., 21 Ethnoarchaeology in Action, 7 Heywood, Linda, 33 Lembo, Ron, 35 Ethnographer’s Eye, The, 20 Higham, Charles, 8 Levinson, Stephen C., 29, 32 Europe before History, 9 Hinton, Alexander Laban, 27 Lewis, M. J. T., 12 Europe in the Neolithic, 8 History and Theory in Anthropology, 23 Liebersohn, Harry, 40 Europe's First Farmers, 16 History of Archaeological Thought, A, 5 Lillie, Malcolm, 16 European Societies in the Bronze Age, 7 History of Everyday Things, A, 34 Limits of Settlement Growth, The, 9 Evolution and the Human Mind, 38 History of the Inca Realm, 15 Linguistic Anthropology, 32 Evolution of Human Societies, The, 21 Hodder, Ian, 5 Linguistic Fieldwork, 30 Evolution of the Polynesian Chiefdoms, The, 9 Holm, John A., 32 Lithics, 11 Evolutionary Emergence of Language, The, 31 Hominoid Evolution and Climatic Change in Living and Working with the New Medical Excavation, 1 Europe, 37 Technologies, 28 Exile to Paradise, 40 Hooff, Jan A. R. A. M. van, 38 Lock, Margaret, 28 Explaining Human Origins, 23 Hoppa, Robert D., 39 Loewe, Michael, 18 F House and Society in the Ancient Greek World, 8 Looking at Greek Vases, 14 Factional Competition and Political Development Howe, Thomas Noble, 13 Losche , Diane, 25 in the New World, 10 Hsu, Elisabeth, 28 Lovejoy, Paul E., 41 Fawcett, Clare, 5 Hsu, Madeline Yuan-yin, 41 Lozada, Eriberto P., 33 Feeding China's Little Emperors, 33 Hull, Derek, 19 Lucy, John Arthur, 30 Feinman, G., 6 Human Evolution, Language and Mind, 5 Lukes, Steven, 24 Feinman, Gary M., 9 Human Growth in the Past, 39 Lupton, Deborah, 35 Fiedel, Stuart J., 15 Human Paleobiology, 39 Lyman, R. Lee, 11 Figments of Reality, 38 Hunter-Gatherers, 37 M Finnegan, Ruth, 25 Hurford, James, 31 MacLeod, Murdo J., 15 Finsten, Laura M., 9 Hurwit, Jeffrey M., 13 Mageo, Jeannette Marie, 27 Fire in the Sea, 4 I Magic, Science and Religion and the Scope of FitzGerald, Charles M., 39 Iceland, Harry B., 15 Rationality, 29 Fix, Alan, 39 Identity without Selfhood, 36 Making History in Banda, 8 Fletcher, Roland, 9 Ikeda, Keiko, 35 Making of the Slavs, The, 16 Flyvbjerg, Bent, 33 Iliffe, John, 5 Making Social Science Matter, 33 Fowler, Jr, William R., 15 Infertility in the Modern World, 39 Man's Place in Evolution, 5 Fox, John W., 10 Intellectual Discourse and the Politics of Manin, Bernard, 29 Fox, Robin, 25 Modernization, 36 Marquez, Patricia C., 25 Fractography, 19 J Martinez, Dolores, 25 Fraser, Mariam, 36 Jacobs, Amy, 25 Mascie-Taylor, C. G. N., 39 Friedrich, Walter L., 4 Jacobs, Ronald N., 36 Mathews, Holly F., 27 Frow, John, 34 Jacobson, Marcey, 22 Mattingly, Cheryl, 25 Fullerton, Mark D., 13 Jashemski, Wilhelmina Feemster, 12 Mayne, Alan, 10 Fundamentalism, Sectarianism, and Revolution, 36 Jenkins, Richard, 25 McBirney, Alexander R., 4 G Jing, Jun, 33 McCormick, Michael, 16 Gamble, Clive, 7 Johnson, Allen W., 21 McDonald, Kevin, 36 Games against Nature, 24 Jones, Andrew, 2 McIntosh, Susan Keech, 10 Gellner, David, 24 Journal of Biosocial Science, 39 McNeill, David, 32 Gellner, Ernest, 24 Journal of Latin American Studies, 15 Medicine and Morality in Haiti, 28 Gewertz, Deborah B., 24 K Medicine, Rationality and Experience, 29 Gibson, D. Blair, 10 Kalambo Falls Prehistoric Site, 19 Migration and Colonization in Human Gidley, Mick, 41 Kaufert, Patricia Alice, 28 Microevolution, 39 Giller, Henri, 35 Keatinge, Richard W., 15 Millett, Martin, 17 Gillette, Maris Boyd, 34 Keim, Curtis, 25 Mirsepassi, Ali, 36 God Aboveground, 33 Kertzer, David, 21 Modernism and the Celtic Revival, 41 Godart, L., 14 Killen, J. T., 14 Molinos, Manuel, 16 Golden Arches East, 25 Kinship and Marriage, 25 Montmollin, Olivier de, 9 Goncu, Artin, 33 Kirch, Patrick Vinton, 2, 9 Moore, Carmella C., 27 Good, Byron J., 29 Knight, Chris, 31 Moore, Jerry D., 9 Gottlieb, Alma, 22 Kohl, Philip L., 5 Morgan, Lynn M., 28 Gould, Richard A., 4 Koufos, George D., 37 Morgan, Marcyliena, 29 Grammatical Categories and Cognition, 30 Kowalewski, S., 6 Morris, Brian, 25 Grauer, Anne L., 30 Kowalewski, Stephen A., 9 Morris, Desmond, 5 Greater Medieval Houses of England and Wales, Kramer, Carol, 7 Morris, Ian, 14 1300–1500, 17 Kristiansen, Kristian, 9 Morrison, J. S., 5 Greece before History, 3 Kuipers, Joel C., 29 Morrison, Kathleen D., 1 Greek Art, 13 Kulick, Don, 30 Mosaics of the Greek and Roman World, 13 Green, Roger C., 2 Kuttner, Ann, 14 Mummies, Disease and Ancient Cultures, 3 Grimshaw, Anna, 20 L Mundy, Martha, 40 Murray, Priscilla M., 3 Gumperz, John J., 29 La Fontaine, Jean, 25 Murray, Tim, 10 H Lamont, Michèle, 35 Musallam, Basim, 40 Hagell, Ann, 35 Langdon, Susan, 14 Hall, Jonathan M., 14 Language Acquisition and Conceptual N Halstead, Paul, 10 Development, 32 Nationalism, Politics and the Practice of Hamers, Josiane F., 32 Language and Conceptualization, 31 Archaeology, 5 Hammerstein, Peter, 38 Language and Gesture, 32 Natural History of Pompeii, The, 12 Hann, C. M., 25 Language and Solitude, 24 Navigation of Feeling, The, 27

Visit our website at uk.cambridge.org 44 Index

Nelson, Robert, 41 Religion and Empire, 9 Style and Society in Dark Age Greece, 9 Nelson, Sarah Milledge, 8 Renfrew, Colin, 10 Suarez-Orozco, Marcelo D., 27 Nevett, Lisa C., 8 Renfrew, Lord, 2 Sumer and the Sumerians, 5 New Order of Things, A, 41 Rethinking Comparative Cultural Sociology, 35 Surveying Instruments of Greece and Rome, 12 Newman, Paul, 30 Rethinking Linguistic Relativity, 29 Sutton, Susan Buck, 22 Nicholas, L., 6 Reyman, Theodore A., 3 Suzuki, Hikaru, 34 Nicholson, Paul T., 3 Richards, Janet, 10 Sztompka, Piotr, 36 Noble, William, 5 Rise and Fall of Languages, The, 32 T Noë, Ronald, 38 Rise of Civilization in India and Pakistan, The, 7 Tagon, Paul S. C., 5 Nomads in Archaeology, 9 Risk and Sociocultural Theory, 35 Tainter, Joseph, 9 Nuyts, Jan, 31 Ritual and Religion in the Making of Humanity, 26 Tales of the City, 25 O Robben, Antonius C. G. M., 27 Tambiah, Stanley, 21 O'Kelly, Michael J., 17 Roche, Daniel, 34 Tambiah, Stanley J., 29 O'Shea, John, 10 Romanization of Britain, The, 17 Tarling, Nicholas, 18 Obliged to be Difficult, 24 Rook, Lorenzo, 37 Taussig, Michael, 25 Ofek, Haim, 37 Room Full of Mirrors, A, 35 Teeter, Emily, 3 Okely, Judith, 25 Rosen, Lawrence, 29 Theorizing the Standoff, 36 Old Age, 29 Roskams, Steve, 1 Thévenot, Laurent, 35 Olivier, J. P., 14 Rostworowski de Diez Canseco, Maria, 15 Thinking through Television, 35 Order, Legitimacy and Wealth in Ancient States, 10 Rouse, Sandra, 25 Thomas, Nicholas, 25 Organization of Attachment Relationships, The, 32 Rowland, Ingrid D., 13 Tilley, Christopher, 9 Origins of the European Economy, 16 Rowley-Conwy, Peter, 37 Tomka, Steve A., 10 Orton, Clive, 11 Rowse, Tim, 24 Trading Crowd, The, 26 P Ruf, Gregory A., 40 Transformation of Nomadic Society in the Arab Pack of Lies, A, 29 Ruiz, Arturo, 16 East, The, 40 Palaeolithic Societies of Europe, The, 7 Runnels, Curtis, 3 Transformations in Slavery, 41 Palliser, D. M., 17 Runnels, Curtis N., 14 Transmission of Chinese Medicine, The, 28 Panter-Brick, Catherine, 23, 37 Rutter, Michael, 35 Traveller-Gypsies, The, 25 Parry, Jonathan P., 29 S Travels with the Fossil Hunters, 4 Parslow, Christopher Charles, 14 Sacconi, A., 14 Trigger, Bruce G., 5, 15 Patterns of Human Growth, 40 Sakellarakis, I. A., 14 Trust, 36 Paul, Elizabeth S., 39 Salomon, Frank, 15 Turton, Mary, 16 Payne, Alina, 14 Sampling in Archaeology, 11 Turton, Mary , 23 Pearce, Brian, 34 Sampson, Steven, 33 Tyers, Paul, 11 Peasants against Globalization, 41 Saunt, Claudio, 41 U Pederson, Eric, 31 Scarre, Chris, 5 Unfinished Revolution, The, 35 Perlès, Catherine, 7 Schildkrout, Enid, 25 V Peruvian Prehistory, 15 Schwartz, Stuart, 15 Van Buren, Mary, 10 Petersen, Roger, 25 Scott, Susan, 38 Vanishing Rouble, The, 41 Petry, Carl F., 19 Scramble for Art in Central Africa, The, 25 Varieties of Javanese Religion, 26 Phenomenology of Working-Class Experience, A, 36 Seabright, Paul, 41 Vertebrate Taphonomy, 11 Phillipson, David W., 8 Sebastian, Lynne, 9 Vince, Alan, 11 Phoenicians and the West, The, 16 Second Nature, 37 Visuality before and beyond the Renaissance, 41 Photography in Archaeology and Conservation, 11 Seeds of Speech, The, 31 Vitruvius, 13 Placing Friendship in Context, 35 Seligmann, Linda J. J., 34 Vitruvius: “Ten Books on Architecture”, 13 Planalp, Sally, 35 Separation and Reunion in Modern China, 24 Voyage of the 'Frolic, The, 15 Podberscek, Anthony L., 39 Serpell, James A., 39 W Sex and Gender in Paleopathological Perspective, 30 Politics after Television, 35 Wagner-Pacifici, Robin, 36 Shanks, Michael, 9 Politics of Race, Ethnicity, and Language in Washburn, Wilcomb E., 15 Sharer, Robert J., 15 National Censuses, The, 21 Wason, Paul K., 9 Shaughnessy, Edward L., 18 Pollock, Susan, 6 Watkins, Trevor , 9 Shaw, Ian, 3 Pottery in Archaeology, 11 Watson, James L., 25 Shells, 11 Potts, D. T., 7 Whitehead, Laurence, 15 Sherratt, Andrew, 10 Power and Intimacy in the Christian Philippines, 26 Whitley, James, 6, 9 Shifting Languages, 29 Power and the Self, 27 Whittle, Alasdair W. R., 8 Sillitoe, Paul, 23 Pragmatic Women and Body Politics, 28 Whybrow, Peter, 4 Sinopoli, Carla M., 1 Prehistory of the Americas, 15 Whyte, Susan Reynolds, 28 Smick, Rebekah, 14 Prey into Hunter, 29 Wierzbicka, Anna, 35 Smith, Malcolm T., 23 Price of Death, The, 34 Wilson, Richard, 20 Smol, John P., 19 Price, T. Douglas, 16 Wilson, Thomas M., 25 Social Anthropology, 26 Principles of Representative Government, The, 29 Wing, Elizabeth S., 11 Social Change in Melanesia, 23 Pringle, Denys, 17 Women of Colonial Latin America, The, 41 Social Life of Things, The, 25 Property Relations, 25 Women Traders in Cross-Cultural Perspective, 34 Socolow, Susan Migden, 41 Psychology of Cultural Experience, The, 27 Woolf, Greg, 14 Southall, Aidan, 5 Pullen, Daniel J., 14 World of Babies, A, 22 Speak of the Devil, 25 Q Worlds of Japanese Popular Culture, The, 25 Spivey, Nigel, 14 Questioning Misfortune, 28 Wright, Laura, 30 Questions of Competence, 25 Stafford, Charles, 24 Stahl, Ann B., 8 Y Quinn, Naomi, 27 Yentsch, Anne Elizabeth, 9 R Stewart, Ian, 38 Stoczkowski, Wiktor, 23 Yoffee, Norman, 10 Race, Media and the Crisis of Civil Society, 36 Stoermer, Eugene F., 19 Young, Allan, 28 Rajagopal, Arvind, 35 Strangers in the City, 33 Yule, George, 32 Rankov, N. B., 5 Strathern, Marilyn, 29 Z Rappaport, Roy A., 26 Strauss, Claudia, 27 Zhang, Li, 33 Rasmussen, Tom, 14 Street is My Home, The, 25 Zooarchaeology, 11 Ratliff, Martha, 30 Streetlife China, 33 Zubrow, Ezra B. W., 10 Reading the Past, 5 Struggles for Subjectivity, 36 Rebhun, L. A., 34 Stuart-Macadam, Patricia, 30 Reddy, William M., 27 Studdert-Kennedy, Michael, 31 Rediscovering Antiquity, 14 Study of Language, The, 32 Reitz, Elizabeth J., 11