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Archaeological Networks and Social Interaction
Archaeological networks and social interaction
Networks in archaeology
The spatial focus
Networks of interaction
Framing the micro scale
References
Relational concepts and challenges to network analysis in social archaeology
Introduction
A Melanesian ontology of face-to-face networks
A Classical ontology?
Gothic ontology and sympathy among things
Conclusions
Acknowledgments
References
Entangled identities: Processes of status construction in late Urnfield burials
Introduction
Bronze Age elites at the dawn of the Iron Age
The late Urnfield culture (Ha B3)
Elite identity in Late Urnfield graves
Strathernograms and funeral identity construction
Translating aspects of identity into network models
Attributes on nodes or ties
Complementary networks
Multi-modal networks
Conclusion
Notes
References
Distributed feasts: Reciprocity, hospitality and banquets in Iron Age to Orientalising central and southern Italy
Introduction
The origins of the gift
Strathern’s The Gender of the Gift: distributed personhood, Melanesia and Strathernograms
Defining the feast
Feasting and reciprocity in Homeric epic
Visualising the feast: Strathernograms and reciprocity
Applying Gell’s Strathernograms: feasting in Early Iron Age and Orientalising Lazio and Campania
References
Marble network: Social interaction in houses at Pompeii
Introduction
The Roman house and social assumptions for the network analysis
Network dataset
Discussion of network graphs for all houses
Discussion of network graphs for Regio I: the case of atria with impluvia
The results of the network analysis for all houses
Final remarks - networks, social interaction and marble decoration at Pompeii
Notes
References
Objects that bind, objects that separate
Introduction
Setting the scene
Framing interaction
The lives of Pithekoussan objects
Drinking cups
Oinochoai
Oil containers
Pithekoussan interactions
Conclusion
Notes
References
A complex beadwork: Bead trade and trade beads in Scandinavia ca. 800-1000 AD revisited
Introduction
Beads and bead trade
‘Trade beads and bead trade’ - unplugged
‘Trade beads and bead trade’ - digitally remastered
Beadwork dynamics
Networks compared
Conclusion
Acknowledgements
Note
References
Social network analysis and the social interactions that define Hopewell
Introduction
Methods and materials
Results
All lithics network
Middle Distance Scale (Wyandotte, Knox, Burlington)
Distant Exotics Scale
Discussion
Acknowledgements
References
Terrestrial communication networks and political agency in Early Iron Age Central Italy (950-500 BCE): A bottom-up approach
Introduction
Theory and methodology
Case studies and data
Case studies
Data
Analyses
Discussion of the results
Conclusions
Acknowledgements
Notes
References
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