1.
Greene, Kevin, Moore, Tom: Archaeology: an introduction. Routledge, London (2010).
2.
Henson, D.: Doing archaeology: a subject guide for students. Routledge, London (2012).
3.
Hodder, I., Hutson, S.: Reading the past: current approaches to interpretation in archaeology. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2003).
4.
Hodder, Ian: The archaeological process: an introduction. Blackwell, Oxford (1999).
5.
Hodder, Ian: Archaeological theory today. Polity, Cambridge (2001).
6.
Johnson, Matthew: Archaeological theory: an introduction. Wiley-Blackwell, Chichester (2010).
7.
Trigger, Bruce G.: A history of archaeological thought. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2006).
8.
Urban, Patricia A., Schortman, Edward M.: Archaeological theory in practice. Left Coast Press, Walnut Creek, Calif (2012).
9.
Hodder, I.: Towards a reflexive method. In: The archaeological process: an introduction. pp. 80–104. Blackwell, Oxford (1999).
10.
Johnson, M.: Common sense is not enough. In: Archaeological theory: an introduction. pp. 1–11. Wiley-Blackwell, Chichester (2010).
11.
Redman, C.: The development of archaeological theory. In: Companion encyclopedia of archaeology. pp. 48–80. Routledge, London (1999).
12.
Bentley, R., Alexander, M.: Introduction on archaeological theories. In: Handbook of archaeological theories. AltaMira Press, Lanham, MD (2008).
13.
Clarke, D.L.: Archaeology: The loss of innocence. Antiquity. 47, 6–18 (1973).
14.
Margaret W. Conkey: Questioning Theory: Is There a Gender of Theory in Archaeology? Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory. 14, 285–310 (2007).
15.
Greene, K.: Chapter 6: making sense of the past. In: Archaeology: an introduction. pp. 249–312. Routledge, London (2010).
16.
Hodder, I.: Introduction: a review of contemporary theoretical debate in archaeology. In: Archaeological theory today. pp. 1–13. Polity, Cambridge (2001).
17.
Meskell, Lynn, Preucel, Robert W.: A companion to social archaeology. Blackwell Pub. Ltd, Malden, MA. (2004).
18.
O’Brien, Michael J., Lyman, R. Lee, Schiffer, Michael B.: Archaeology as a process: processualism and its progeny. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City (2005).
19.
Praetzellis, Adrian: Death by theory: a tale of mystery and archaeological theory. AltaMira Press, Oxford (2000).
20.
Thomas, J.: Where are we now? Archaeological theory in the 1990s. In: Theory in archaeology: a world perspective. pp. 343–362. Routledge, London (1994).
21.
Trigger, Bruce G.: A history of archaeological thought. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2006).
22.
VanPool, Todd L., VanPool, Christine S.: Essential tensions in archaeological method and theory. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City (2003).
23.
Yoffee, Norman, Sherratt, Andrew: Archaeological theory: who sets the agenda? Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1993).
24.
Childe, V.G.: What happens in prehistory? In: Piecing together the past: the interpretation of archaeological data. pp. 135–158. Routledge & Kegan Paul, London (1956).
25.
Hawkes, C.: Wenner-Gren Foundation Supper Conference - Archaeological theory and method: Some suggestiongs from the Old World. American Anthropologist. 56, 155–168 (1954).
26.
Trigger, B.G.: Culture-historical archaeology. In: A history of archaeological thought. pp. 211–313. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2006).
27.
Childe, V.G.: Preface and chapter 1. In: The Danube in prehistory. pp. v-xii-1–7. Clarendon Press, Oxford (1929).
28.
Gordon Childe, V.: Changing aims and methods in prehistory. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society. 1, 1–15 (1935).
29.
Clark, Grahame: Archaeology and society. Methuen, London (1960).
30.
Diaz-Andreu, M.: Britain and the Other: the archaeology of imperialism. In: History, nationhood, and the question of Britain. pp. 227–241. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke (2004).
31.
Díaz-Andreu García, Margarita: A world history of nineteenth-century archaeology: nationalism, colonialism, and the past. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2007).
32.
Fagan, Brian M.: Grahame Clark: an intellectual biography of an archaeologist. Westview, Boulder, Colo (2001).
33.
Harris, David R., Childe, V. Gordon, V. Gordon Childe Centennial Conference, University College, London, Prehistoric Society (London, England): The archaeology of V. Gordon Childe: contemporary perspectives : proceedings of the V. Gordon Childe Centennial Conference held at the Institute of Archaeology, University College London, 8-9 May 1992 under the auspices of the Institute of Archaeology and the Prehistoric Society. UCL Press, London (1994).
34.
Hingley, R.: Chapters 9 and 10. In: Roman officers and English gentlemen: the imperial origins of Roman archaeology. Routledge, New York (2000).
35.
Jones, S.: Chapter 2. In: The archaeology of ethnicity: constructing identities in the past and present. Routledge, London (1997).
36.
Lyman, R. Lee, O’Brien, Michael J., Dunnell, Robert C.: The rise and fall of culture history. Plenum Press, London (1997).
37.
Lyman, R.L., O’Brien, M.J.: A history of normative theory in Americanist archaeology. Journal of archaeological method and theory. 11, 369–396 (2004).
38.
Patterson, Thomas Carl: Marx’s ghost: conversations with archaeologists. Berg, Oxford (2003).
39.
Renfrew, C.: Beyond diffusion. In: Before civilization: the radiocarbon revolution and prehistoric Europe. pp. 109–119. Pimlico, London (1999).
40.
Schnapp, A.: Between antiquarians and archaeologists - Continuities and ruptures. Antiquity. 76, 134–140 (2002).
41.
Shennan, S.J.: Introduction: archaeological approaches to cultural identity. In: Archaeological approaches to cultural identity. pp. 1–32. Routledge, London (1994).
42.
Spaulding, A.C.: Statistical techniques for the discovery of artifact types. American Antiquity. 18, 305–313 (1953).
43.
Taylor, W.W.: Chapter 6. In: A study of archaeology. American Anthropological Association, [S.l.] (1948).
44.
Webster, G.: Culture history: a culture-historical approach. In: Handbook of archaeological theories. pp. 11–27. AltaMira Press, Lanham, MD (2008).
45.
Wheeler, Robert Eric Mortimer: Archaeology from the earth. Clarendon Press, Oxford (1954).
46.
Binford, L.R.: Archaeological perspectives. In: New perspectives in archeology. pp. 5–32. Aldine, Chicago (1968).
47.
Binford, L.R.: A consideration of archaeological research design. American Antiquity. 29, 425–441 (1964).
48.
Trigger, B.G.: Current trends in American archaeology. In: Time and traditions: essays in archaeological interpretation. pp. 2–18. Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh (1978).
49.
Binford, L.R.: Archaeology as anthropology. American Antiquity. 28, 217–225 (1962).
50.
Clarke, D.L.: Archaeology: The loss of innocence. Antiquity. 47, 6–18 (1973).
51.
Clarke, David L., Chapman, Bob: Analytical archaeology. Methuen, London (1978).
52.
Clark, G.: Economic approach to prehistory. In: Economic prehistory: papers on archaeology. pp. 149–168. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge [Cambridgeshire] (1989).
53.
Dunnell, R.C.: Five decades of American archaeology. In: American archaeology, past and future: a celebration of the Society for American Archaeology, 1935-1985. Smithsonian Institution Press, London (1986).
54.
Flannery, K.V.: Culture history vs. culture process: A Debate in American archaeology. Scientific American. 2, 119–122 (1967).
55.
Flannery, K.V.: Archaeological systems theory and early Mesoamerica. In: Anthropological archeology in the Americas. pp. 67–87. The Anthropological Society of Washington, Washington, DC (1968).
56.
Lyman, R.L.: What is the `process’ in cultural process and in processual archaeology? Anthropological Theory. 7, 217–250 (2007). https://doi.org/10.1177/1463499607077299.
57.
David J. Meltzer: Paradigms and the Nature of Change in American Archaeology. American Antiquity. 44, 644–657 (1979).
58.
O’Brien, Michael J., Lyman, R. Lee, Schiffer, Michael B.: Archaeology as a process: processualism and its progeny. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City (2005).
59.
Plog, F.: Laws, systems of laws and the explanation of observed variation. In: The explanation of culture change: models in prehistory. pp. 649–661. Duckworth, London (1973).
60.
Redman, C.L.: Distinguished lecture in archaeology: In defence of the seventies - The adolescence of New Archaeology. American Anthropologist. 93, 295–307 (1991).
61.
Renfrew, C.: Culture systems and the multiplier effect. In: The emergence of civilisation: the Cyclades and the Aegean in the Third Millennium B.C. pp. 19–44. Methuen, London (1972).
62.
Renfrew, C.: Monuments, mobilization and social organization in Neolithic Wessex. In: The explanation of culture change: models in prehistory. pp. 539–558. Duckworth, London (1973).
63.
Taylor, W.W.: Chapter 6. In: A study of archaeology. American Anthropological Association, [S.l.] (1948).
64.
Taylor, W.W.: Old wine and new skins: A contemporary parable. In: Contemporary archaeology: a guide to theory and contributions. pp. 28–33. Feffer & Simons, Carbondale, Ill (1972).
65.
Trigger, B.G.: Chapter 7. In: A history of archaeological thought. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2006).
66.
Trigger, B.G.: Aims in prehistoric archaeology. Antiquity. 44, 26–37 (1970).
67.
Watson, P.J.: Processualism and after. In: Handbook of archaeological theories. pp. 29–38. AltaMira Press, Lanham, MD (2008).
68.
Binford, L.R.: Relics to artifacts and monuments to assemblages: changing conceptual frameworks. In: Bones: ancient men and modern myths. pp. 3–20. Academic Press, London (1981).
69.
Flannery, K.V.: The Golden Marshalltown: A Parable for the Archeology of the 1980s. American Anthropologist. 84, 265–278 (1982).
70.
Schiffer, M.B.: Archaeological context and systemic context. American Antiquity. 37, 156–165 (1972).
71.
Arnold, P.: Back to basics: the middle-range program as pragmatic archaeology. In: Essential tensions in archaeological method and theory. pp. 55–66. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City (2003).
72.
Binford, L.R.: General introduction. In: For theory building in archaeology: essays on faunal remains, aquatic resources, spatial analysis and systemic modeling. pp. 1–10. Academic Press, London (1977).
73.
Binford, L.R.: Behavioural archaeological and the ‘Pompeii Premise’ . Journal of Anthropological Research. 37, 195–208 (1981).
74.
Binford, Lewis Roberts: Constructing frames of reference: an analytical method for archaeological theory building using hunter-gatherer and environmental data sets. University of California Press, Berkeley (2001).
75.
Butzer, Karl W.: Archaeology as human ecology: method and theory for a contextual approach. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1982).
76.
Courbin, Paul: What is archaeology?: an essay on the nature of archaeological research. University of Chicago Press, Chicago (1988).
77.
Robert C. Dunnell: The Harvey Lecture Series. Science, Social Science, and Common Sense: The Agonizing Dilemma of Modern Archaeology. Journal of Anthropological Research. 38, 1–25 (1982).
78.
Hayden, B., Cannon, A.: Where the garbage goes: Refuse disposal in the Maya Highlands. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology. 2, 117–163 (1983). https://doi.org/10.1016/0278-4165(83)90010-7.
79.
Higgs, E.S., Vita-Finzi, C.: Prehistoric economies: A territorial approach. In: Papers in economic prehistory: studies by members and associates of the British Academy Major Research Project in the Early History of Agriculture. pp. 27–36. Cambridge University Press, London (1972).
80.
LaMotta, V., Schiffer, M.: Behavioral archaeology. Towards a new synthesis. In: Archaeological theory today. Polity, Cambridge (2001).
81.
Leone, Mark P.: Contemporary archaeology: a guide to theory and contributions. Feffer & Simons, Carbondale, Ill (1972).
82.
Patrik, L.E.: Is there an archaeological record? Advances in Archaeological Method and Theory. 8, 27–62 (1985).
83.
Price, B.J.: Cultural Materialism: A Theoretical Review. American Antiquity. 47, 709–741 (1982).
84.
Renfrew, Colin, Research Seminar in Archaeology and Related Subjects: The explanation of culture change: models in prehistory. Duckworth, London (1973).
85.
Schiffer, Michael B.: Behavioral archaeology. Academic Press, London (1976).
86.
Schiffer, M.B.: Is there a ‘Pompeii Premise’ in archaeology? Journal of Anthropological Research. 41, 18–41 (1985).
87.
Schiffer, Michael B.: Behavioral archaeology: first principles. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City (1995).
88.
Schiffer, Michael B.: Formation processes of the archaeological record. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque, N.M. (1987).
89.
Shott, M.J.: Status and role of formation theory in contemporary archaeological practice. Journal of archaeological research. 6, 299–329 (1998).
90.
Trigger, B.G.: Expanding middle-range theory. Antiquity. 69, 449–458 (1995).
91.
Wylie, A.: The reaction against analogy. Advances in Archaeological Method and Theory. 8, 63–111 (1985).
92.
Hodder, I.: Chapter 1: The problem. In: Reading the past: current approaches to interpretation in archaeology. pp. 1–19. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2003).
93.
Leone, M.: Towards a critical archaeology. Current Anthropology. 28, 283–302 (1987).
94.
Shanks, M., Tilley, C.Y.: Chapter 3: facts and values in archaeology. In: Re-constructing archaeology: theory and practice. pp. 46–67. Routledge, London (1992).
95.
Wylie, A.: The interpretive dilemma. In: Critical traditions in contemporary archaeology: essays in the philosophy, history and socio-politics of archaeology. pp. 18–27. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1989).
96.
Review by: Lewis R. Binford: American Antiquity. Vol. 53, 875–876.
97.
Cowgill, G.L.: Distinguished lecture in archaeology: Beyond criticizing New Archaeology. American Anthropologist, New Series. 95, 551–573 (1993).
98.
Earle et. al., T.K.: Processual archaeology and the radical critique. Current Anthropology. 28, 501–538 (1987).
99.
Hodder, I.: Theoretical archaeology: A reactionary view. In: Symbolic and structural archaeology. pp. 92–121. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1982).
100.
Hodder, I.: Postprocessual archaeology. Advances in Archaeological Method and Theory. 8, 1–26 (1985).
101.
Johnson, M.: Chapters 6 and 7. In: Archaeological theory: an introduction. Wiley-Blackwell, Chichester (2010).
102.
Leone, M.: Symbolic, structural and critical archaeology. In: American archaeology, past and future: a celebration of the Society for American Archaeology, 1935-1985. pp. 415–438. Smithsonian Institution Press, London (1986).
103.
Shanks, M., Tilley, C.Y.: Archaeology and the politics of theory. In: Social theory and archaeology. pp. 186–208. Polity in association with Blackwell, Cambridge (1987).
104.
Shanks, Michael, Tilley, Christopher Y.: Re-constructing archaeology: theory and practice. Routledge, London (1992).
105.
Shanks, M.: Post-processual archaeology and after. In: Handbook of archaeological theories. pp. 133–144. AltaMira Press, Lanham, MD (2008).
106.
Tilley, C.Y.: Ideology and the legitimation of power in the middle Neolithic of southern Sweden. In: Ideology, power and prehistory. pp. 111–145. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1984). https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511897443.
107.
Trigger, B.G.: Distinguished lecture in archaeology: Constraint and freedom - A new synthesis for archaeological explanation. American Anthropologist. 93, 551–569 (1991).
108.
Trigger, B.G.: Archaeology at the Crossroads: What’s New? Annual Review of Anthropology. 13, 275–300 (1984). https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.an.13.100184.001423.
109.
Trigger, B.G.: Chapter 8: Processualism and post-processualism. In: A history of archaeological thought. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2006).
110.
Wylie, A.: On ‘heavily decomposing red herrings’. Scientific method in archaeology and the ladening of evidence with theory. In: Metaarchaeology: reflections by archaeologists and philosophers. pp. 145–157. Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht (1992).
111.
Shanks, M., Hodder, I.: Processual, postprocessual and interpretive archaeologies. In: Interpreting archaeology: finding meaning in the past. pp. 3–29. Routledge, London (1994).
112.
Shanks, M., Tilley, C.: Comments on Archaeology into the 1990s. Norwegian Archaeological Review. 22, 12–54 (1989).
113.
Barrett, John C.: Fragments from antiquity: an archaeology of social life in Britain, 2900-1200 BC. Blackwell, Cambridge, Mass (1993).
114.
Brück, J.: Experiencing the past? The development of a phenomenological archaeology in British prehistory. Archaeological Dialogues. 12, 45–72 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1017/S1380203805001583.
115.
Buchli, Victor, Lucas, Gavin, Cox, Margaret: Archaeologies of the contemporary past. Routledge, London (2001).
116.
Chippindale, C.: Ambition, deference, discrepancy, comsumption: the intellectual background to a post-processual archaeology. In: Archaeological theory: who sets the agenda? pp. 27–36. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1993).
117.
Dobres, Marcia-Anne: Technology and social agency: outlining a practice framework for archaeology. Blackwell Publishers, Oxford (2000).
118.
Dowson, T.A.: Homosexuality, queer theory and archaeology. In: Interpretive archaeology: a reader. pp. 283–289. Leicester University Press, London (2000).
119.
Gero, J.M., Wright, M.: Tensions, pluralities and engendering archaeology: An introduction to Women and Prehistory. In: Engendering archaeology: women and prehistory. pp. 3–30. Blackwell, Oxford (1991).
120.
Hegmon, M.: Setting theoretical egos aside: Issues and theory in North American archaeology. American Antiquity. 68, 213–243 (2003).
121.
Hodder, I.: Interpretive archaeology and its role. American Antiquity. 56, 7–18 (1991).
122.
Hodder, I.: Material practice, symbolism and ideology. In: Theory and practice in archaeology. pp. 201–212. Routledge, London (1992).
123.
Hodder, Ian: Interpreting archaeology: finding meaning in the past. Routledge, London (1994).
124.
Hodder, I., Karlsson, H., Olsen, B.: 40 Years of Theoretical Engagement: A Conversation with Ian Hodder. Norwegian Archaeological Review. 41, 26–42 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1080/00293650802181154.
125.
LaMotta, V., Schiffer, M.: Behavioral archaeology. Towards a new synthesis. In: Archaeological theory today. pp. 14–64. Polity, Cambridge (2012).
126.
Mackenzie, Iain M.: Archaeological theory: progress or posture? Avebury, Aldershot (1994).
127.
Meskell, Lynn: Archaeologies of social life: age, sex, class et cetera in ancient Egypt. Blackwell, Oxford (1999).
128.
Preucel, R.W.: The postprocessual condition. Journal of Archaeological Research. 3, 147–175 (1995).
129.
Renfrew, C.: Towards a cognitive archaeology. In: The ancient mind: elements of cognitive archaeology. pp. 3–12. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1994).
130.
Shanks, M.: Post-processual archaeology and after. In: Handbook of archaeological theories. pp. 133–144. AltaMira Press, Lanham, MD (2008).
131.
Tarlow, Sarah, West, Susie: The familiar past?: archaeologies of later historical Britain. Routledge, London (1999).
132.
Thomas, J.: Where are we now? Archaeological theory in the 1990s. In: Theory in archaeology: a world perspective. pp. 343–362. Routledge, London (1994).
133.
Thomas, Julian: Time, culture and identity: an interpretative archaeology. Routledge, London (1996).
134.
Tilley, C.: Interpreting material culture. In: The meanings of things: material culture and symbolic expression. pp. 185–194. Routledge, London (1989).
135.
Tilley, Christopher Y.: Interpretative archaeology. Berg, New York (1992).
136.
Trigger, B.G.: Post‐processual developments in Anglo‐American archaeology. Norwegian Archaeological Review. 24, 65–76 (1991).
137.
Trigger, B.G.: Hyper-relativism, responsibility and the Social Sciences. In: Artifacts & ideas: essays in archaeology. pp. 113–131. Transaction, London (2003).
138.
Trigger, B.G.: Chapter 9 and 10. In: A history of archaeological thought. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2006).
139.
Michelle Hegmon: Setting Theoretical Egos Aside: Issues and Theory in North American Archaeology. American Antiquity. 68, 213–243 (2003).
140.
Johnson, M.: On the nature of theoretical archaeology and archaeological theory. Archaeological Dialogues. 13, 117–132 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1017/S138020380621208X.
141.
Kristiansen, K.: Genes versus agents: A discussion of the widening theoretical gap in archaeology. Archaeological Dialogues. 11, 77–99 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1017/S1380203805211509.
142.
Barrett, J.C.: The material constitution of humanness. Archaeological Dialogues. 21, 65–74 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1017/S1380203814000105.
143.
Bentley, A., Maschner, H.D.G.: Complexity theory. In: Handbook of archaeological theories. pp. 245–270. AltaMira Press, Lanham, MD (2008).
144.
Bintliff, J. L., Pearce, Mark: The death of archaeological theory? Oxbow Books, Oakville (2011).
145.
Cochrane, Ethan E., Gardner, Andrew: Evolutionary and interpretive archaeologies: a dialogue. Left Coast, Walnut Creek, Calif (2011).
146.
Funari, Pedro Paulo A., Zarankin, Andrés, Stovel, Emily: Global archaeological theory: contextual voices and contemporary thoughts. Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers, London (2005).
147.
Zarankin, Andrés, Salerno, Melisa A., Funari, Pedro Paulo A.: Memories from darkness: archaeology of repression and resistance in Latin America. Springer, London (2009).
148.
Gaydarska, B.: A brief history of TAG. Antiquity. 83, 1152–1162 (2009).
149.
Michelle Hegmon: No More Theory Wars: A Response to Moss. American Antiquity. 70, 588–590 (2005).
150.
Hodder, I.: Introduction: contemporary theoretical debate in archaeology. In: Archaeological theory today. pp. 1–14. Polity, Cambridge (2012).
151.
Lydon, Jane, Rizvi, Uzma Z.: Handbook of postcolonial archaeology. Left Coast Press, Walnut Creek, Calif (2010).
152.
Knappett, Carl: An archaeology of interaction: network perspectives on material culture and society. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2011).
153.
Mizoguchi, Kōji: Archaeology, society and identity in modern Japan. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2006).
154.
Madonna L. Moss: Rifts in the Theoretical Landscape of Archaeology in the United States: A Comment on Hegmon and Watkins. American Antiquity. 70, 581–587 (2005).
155.
Olsen, B.: Symmetical archaeology. In: Archaeological theory today. pp. 208–228. Polity, Cambridge (2012).
156.
Pauketat, T.R.: Practice and history in archaeology: An emerging paradigm. Anthropological Theory. 1, 73–98 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1177/146349960100100105.
157.
Preucel, R.W., Mrozowski, S.A.: The new pragmatism. In: Contemporary archaeology in theory: the new pragmatism. pp. 3–49. Wiley-Blackwell, Oxford (2010).
158.
Robb, J., Pauketat, T.R.: Big histories, human lives: tackling problems of scale in archaeology. School for Advanced Research Press, Santa Fe, N.M. (2013).
159.
Michael Shanks: Symmetrical Archaeology. World Archaeology. 39, 589–596 (2007).
160.
Smith, Laurajane: Archaeological theory and the politics of cultural heritage. Routledge, London (2004).
161.
Spriggs, M.: Ethnographic parallels and the denial of history. World Archaeology. 40, 538–552 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1080/00438240802453161.
162.
Bruce G. Trigger: Archaeology and Epistemology: Dialoguing across the Darwinian Chasm. American Journal of Archaeology. 102, 1–34 (1998).
163.
Ucko, Peter J., Theoretical Archaeology Group: Theory in archaeology: a world perspective. Routledge, London (1994).
164.
Watts, C.M.: Relational archaeologies: humans, animals, things. Routledge, London (2013).
165.
Webmoor, T., Witmore, C.L.: Things Are Us! A Commentary on Human/Things Relations under the Banner of a ‘Social’ Archaeology. Norwegian Archaeological Review. 41, 53–70 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1080/00293650701698423.
166.
Andrews, G., Barrett, J.C., Lewis, J.S.C.: Interpretation not record: The practice of archaeology. Antiquity. 74, 525–530 (2000).
167.
Hodder, I.: Towards a reflexive method. In: The archaeological process: an introduction. pp. 80–104. Blackwell, Oxford (1999).
168.
Lucas, G.: Introduction: archaeology and the field. In: Critical approaches to fieldwork: contemporary and historical archaeological practice. pp. 1–17. Routledge, London (2001).
169.
Roskams, S.: Future prospects. In: Excavation. pp. 267–290. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2001).
170.
Bender, B., Tilley, C.Y., Anderson, E., Hamilton, S.: Chapters 1 and 3. In: Stone worlds: narrative and reflexivity in landscape archaeology. Left Coast Press, Walnut Creek, Calif (2007).
171.
Berggren, A., Hodder, I.: Social practice, method and some problems of field archaeology. American Antiquity. 68, 421–434 (2003).
172.
Binford, L.R.: A consideration of archaeological research design. American Antiquity. 29, 425–441 (1964).
173.
Chadwick, A.: Post-processualism, professionalization and archaeological methodologies. Towards reflexive and radical practice. Archaeological Dialogues. 10, 97–117 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1017/S1380203803001107.
174.
Collis, John: Digging up the past: an introduction to archaeological excavation. Sutton, Stroud (2001).
175.
Conolly, J.: Catalhoyuk and the archaeological object. In: Towards reflexive method in archaeology: the example at Çatalhöyük : by members of the Çatalhöyük team. pp. 51–56. McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, Cambridge (2000).
176.
Edgeworth, Matt: Acts of discovery: an ethnography of archaeological practice. Archaeopress, Oxford (2003).
177.
Edgeworth, Matt: Ethnographies of archaeological practice: cultural encounters, material transformations. Altamira Press, Lanham (2006).
178.
Gero, J.M.: Archaeological practice and gendered encounters with field data. In: Gender and archaeology. pp. 251–280. University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia (1996).
179.
Hamilton, S.: Lost in translation? A comment on the excavation report. Papers from the Institute of Archaeology. 10, 1–8 (1999). https://doi.org/10.5334/pia.140.
180.
Hamilton, S., Whitehouse, R., Brown, K., Combes, P., Herring, E., Thomas, M.S.: Phenomenology in Practice: Towards a Methodology for a `Subjective’ Approach. European Journal of Archaeology. 9, 31–71 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1177/1461957107077704.
181.
Hassan, F.A.: Beyond the surface: Comments on Hodder’s ‘reflexive excavation methodology’. Antiquity. 71, 1020–1025 (1997).
182.
Hodder, I.: Writing archaeology: site reports in context. In: Theory and practice in archaeology. pp. 263–274. Routledge, London (1992).
183.
Hodder, I.: Always momentary, fluid and flexible: Towards a reflexive excavation methodology. Antiquity. 71, 691–700 (1997).
184.
Jones, Andrew: Archaeological theory and scientific practice. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2001).
185.
Lucas, G.: Understanding the archaeological record. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2012).
186.
Moshenska, Gabriel, Dhanjal, Sarah: Community archaeology: themes, methods and practices. Oxbow, Oxford (2012).
187.
Papaconstantinou, Demetra: Deconstructing context: a critical approach to archaeological practice. Oxbow, Oxford (2006).
188.
Parker Pearson, M., Ramilisonina: Stonehenge for the ancestors: The stones pass on the message. Antiquity. 72, 308–326 (1998).
189.
Scarre, G., Coningham, R.: Appropriating the past: philosophical perspectives on the practice of archaeology. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2013).
190.
Quirke, Stephen: Hidden hands: Egyptian workforces in Petrie excavation archives, 1880-1924. Gerald Duckworth, London (2010).
191.
Shanks, M., McGuire, R.H.: The craft of archaeology. American Antiquity. 61, 75–88 (1996).
192.
Tilley, C.: Excavation as Theatre. Antiquity. 63, 275–280 (1989).
193.
Parker Pearson, M., Ramilisonina: Stonehenge for the ancestors: The stones pass on the message. Antiquity. 72, 308–326 (1998).
194.
Parker Pearson et. al., M.: Who was buried at Stonehenge? Antiquity. 83, 23–39 (2009).
195.
Pearson, M.P.: Materializing Stonehenge: The Stonehenge Riverside Project and New Discoveries. Journal of Material Culture. 11, 227–261 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1177/1359183506063024.
196.
Renfrew, C.: Monuments, mobilization and social organisation in Neolithic Wessex. In: The explanation of culture change: models in prehistory. pp. 539–558. Duckworth, London (1973).
197.
Atkinson, R. J. C.: Stonehenge. Penquin Books in association with Hamish Hamilton, Harmondsworth (1960).
198.
Bender, B.: Theorising landscapes, and the prehistoric landscape of Stonehenge. Man. 27, 735–755 (1992).
199.
Bender, Barbara, Aitken, Paul: Stonehenge: making space. Berg, Oxford (1998).
200.
Bradley, Richard: The significance of monuments: on the shaping of human experience in Neolithic and Bronze Age Europe. Routledge, London (1998).
201.
Chippindale, Christopher: Stonehenge complete. Thames & Hudson, [London] (2004).
202.
Chippindale, Christopher: Who owns Stonehenge? Batsford, London (1990).
203.
Cleal, Rosamund, Walker, K. E., Montague, R., English Heritage: Stonehenge in its landscape: twentieth-century excavations. English Heritage, London (1995).
204.
Renfrew, Colin, Cunliffe, Barry W., British Academy: Science and Stonehenge. Oxford University Press for the British Academy, Oxford (1997).
205.
Parker Pearson et. al., M.: The age of Stonehenge. Antiquity. 81, 617–639 (2007).
206.
Parker Pearson et. al., M.: Stonehenge, its river and its landscape: Unravelling the mysteries of a prehistoric sacred place. Archäologischer Anzeiger: Beiblatt zum Jahrbuch des Deutschen Archäologischen Instituts. 1, 237–258 (2006).
207.
Richards, Julian C., English Heritage: English Heritage book of Stonehenge. B. T. Batsford Ltd./ English Heritage, London (1991).
208.
Richards, Julian C., Allen, Mike, English Heritage: The Stonehenge environs project. Historical Buildings & Monuments Commission for England, London (1990).
209.
James, S.: Roman archaeology: Crisis and revolution. Antiquity. 77, 178–184 (2003).
210.
Witcher, R., Tolia-Kelly, D.P., Hingley, R.: Archaeologies of Landscape: Excavating the Materialities of Hadrian’s Wall. Journal of Material Culture. 15, 105–128 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1177/1359183510355228.
211.
Andrén, Anders, Crozier, Alan: Between artifacts and texts: historical archaeology in global perspective. Plenum Press, London (1998).
212.
Dyson, Stephen L.: In pursuit of ancient pasts: a history of classical archaeology in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Yale University Press, London (2006).
213.
Frere, S.S.: Roman Britain since Haverfield and Richmond. History and Archaeology Review. 3, 31–36 (1988).
214.
Gardner, A.: Seeking a material turn: the artefactuality of the Roman Empire. In: TRAC 2002: proceedings of the twelfth annual Theoretical Roman Archaeology Conference which took place at the University of Kent at Canterbury 5-6 April 2002. pp. 1–13. Oxbow Books, Oxford (2003).
215.
Hingley, Richard: Roman officers and English gentlemen: the imperial origins of Roman archaeology. Routledge, New York (2000).
216.
Hingley, R.: Hadrian’s Wall in theory: pursuing new agendas. In: Understanding Hadrian’s Wall: papers from a conference held at South Shields, 3rd-5th November 2006, to mark the publication of the 14th edition of the Handbook to the Roman Wall. pp. 25–28. Arbeia Society, South Shields (2008).
217.
Hingley, R.: ‘The most ancient Boundary between England and Scotland’: Genealogies of the Roman Walls. Classical Receptions Journal. 2, 25–43 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1093/crj/clq001.
218.
Hodder, I.: Bridging the divide: a commentary on theoretical Roman archaeology. In: Theoretical Roman archaeology: first conference proceedings. pp. xiii–xix. Avebury, Aldershot (1993).
219.
Ian Hodder and Mark Hassall: The Non-Random Spacing of Romano-British Walled Towns. Man. 6, 391–407 (1971).
220.
James, S.: Writing the Legions: The Development and Future of Roman Military Studies in Britain. Archaeological Journal. 159, 1–58 (2002). https://doi.org/10.1080/00665983.2002.11020514.
221.
James, Simon, Millett, Martin, Theoretical Roman Archaeology Conference, Council for British Archaeology: Britons and Romans: advancing an archaeological agenda. Council for British Archaeology, York (2001).
222.
Johnson, M.H.: Rethinking historical archaeology. In: Historical archaeology: back from the edge. pp. 23–36. Routledge, New York (1999).
223.
Moore, T.: Detribalizing the later prehistoric past: Concepts of tribes in Iron Age and Roman studies. Journal of Social Archaeology. 11, 334–360 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1177/1469605311403861.
224.
Nesbitt, C., Tolia-Kelly, D.: Hadrian’s Wall: Embodied archaeologies of the linear monument. Journal of Social Archaeology. 9, 368–390 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1177/1469605309338428.
225.
Glenn R. Storey: Archaeology and Roman Society: Integrating Textual and Archaeological Data. Journal of Archaeological Research. 7, 203–248 (1999).
226.
Mason, David J. P., Symonds, Matthew F. A.: Frontiers of knowledge: a research framework for Hadrian’s Wall, part of the Frontiers of the Roman Empire World Heritage site. Durham County Council and Durham University, Durham (2009).
227.
Cooper, Nicholas, Webster, Jane, University of Leicester: Roman imperialism: post-colonial perspectives. School of Archaeological Studies, University of Leicester, Leicester (1996).
228.
Wilmott, T.: Collapse theory and the end of Birdoswald. In: Theoretical Roman archaeology: second conference proceedings. pp. 59–69. Avebury, Aldershot (1995).
229.
Wilmott, Tony, English Heritage: Hadrian’s Wall: archaeological research by English Heritage 1976-2000. English Heritage, Swindon (2009).
230.
Witcher, R.: The Fabulous Tales of the Common People, Part 1: Representing Hadrian’s Wall. Public Archaeology. 9, 126–152 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1179/146551810X12822101587138.
231.
Greg Woolf: The Present State and Future Scope of Roman Archaeology: A Comment. American Journal of Archaeology. 108, 417–428 (2004).
232.
Tim Ingold: The Temporality of the Landscape. World Archaeology. 25, 152–174 (1993).
233.
Lucas, G.: Time and Archaeological Event. Cambridge Archaeological Journal. 18, 59–65 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1017/S095977430800005X.
234.
Mytum, H.: Materiality and memory: an archaeological perspective on the popular adoption of linear time in Britain. Antiquity. 81, 381–396 (2007).
235.
Adam, B.: Perceptions of time. In: Companion encyclopedia of anthropology. pp. 503–526. Routledge, London (2002).
236.
Adam, Barbara: Timewatch: the social analysis of time. Polity Press, Cambridge (1995).
237.
G. N. Bailey: Concepts of Time in Quaternary Prehistory. Annual Review of Anthropology. 12, 165–192 (1983).
238.
Bailey, G.: Time perspectives, palimpsests and the archaeology of time. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology. 26, 198–223 (2007). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaa.2006.08.002.
239.
Barrett, John C.: Fragments from antiquity: an archaeology of social life in Britain, 2900-1200 BC. Blackwell, Oxford (1993).
240.
Rosen, Ralph Mark, University of Pennsylvania: Time and temporality in the ancient world. University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, Philadelphia (2004).
241.
Bintliff, J. L.: The Annales school and archaeology. Leicester University Press, London (1991).
242.
Borić, Dušan: Archaeology and memory. Oxbow Books, Oxford (2010).
243.
Bradley, Richard: The past in prehistoric societies. Routledge, London (2002).
244.
Gardner, A.: Time and empire in the Roman world. Journal of Social Archaeology. 12, 145–166 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1177/1469605312439971.
245.
Gell, Alfred: The anthropology of time: cultural constructions of temporal maps and images. Berg, Oxford (1992).
246.
Gosden, Chris: Social being and time. Blackwell, Oxford (1994).
247.
Hannah, Robert: Time in antiquity. Routledge, Abingdon (2009).
248.
Harding, J.: Rethinking the Great Divide: Long‐Term Structural History and the Temporality of Event. Norwegian Archaeological Review. 38, 88–101 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1080/00293650510032707.
249.
Holdaway, Simon, Wandsnider, LuAnn: Time in archaeology: time perspectivism revisited. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City (2008).
250.
Karlsson, Håkan: It’s about time: the concept of time in archaeology. Bricoleur, Göteborg (2001).
251.
Redman, Charles L.: Social archeology: beyond subsistence and dating. Academic Press, New York (1978).
252.
Lucas, Gavin: The archaeology of time. Routledge, London (2005).
253.
Nancy D. Munn: The Cultural Anthropology of Time: A Critical Essay. Annual Review of Anthropology. 21, 93–123 (1992).
254.
Murray, Tim, World Archaeological Congress: Time and archaeology. Routledge, London (1999).
255.
Nanni, G.: Time, empire and resistance in settler-colonial Victoria. Time & Society. 20, 5–33 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1177/0961463X10369765.
256.
Shanks, M., Tilley, C.: Abstract and Substantial Time. Archaeological Review From Cambridge. 6, 32–41 (1987).
257.
Mackenzie, Iain M.: Archaeological theory: progress or posture? Avebury, Aldershot (1994).
258.
Thomas, Julian: Time, culture and identity: an interpretative archaeology. Routledge, New York (1996).
259.
Van Dyke, Ruth, Alcock, Susan E.: Archaeologies of memory. Blackwell, Malden, MA (2003).
260.
Whittle, A., Bayliss, A., Healy, F.: The Timing and Tempo of Change: Examples from the Fourth Millennium cal. BC in Southern England. Cambridge Archaeological Journal. 18, 65–70 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0959774308000061.
261.
David, B., Thomas, J.: Landscape archaeology: Introduction. In: Handbook of landscape archaeology. pp. 27–43. Left Coast Press, Walnut Creek, Calif (2008).
262.
Hamilton, S.: The ambiguity of landscape: discussing points of relatedness in concepts and methods. In: Evolutionary and interpretive archaeologies: a dialogue. pp. 263–280. Left Coast, Walnut Creek, Calif (2011).
263.
Thomas, J.: Archaeologies of place and landscape. In: Archaeological theory today. pp. 165–186. Polity, Cambridge (2012).
264.
Tilley, C.Y.: Space, place, landscape and perception: phenomenological perspectives. In: A phenomenology of landscape: places, paths, and monuments. pp. 7–34. Berg, Oxford (1994).
265.
Ashmore, W., Knapp, A.B.: Archaeological landscapes: constructed, conceptualised, ideational. In: Archaeologies of landscape: contemporary perspectives. pp. 1–30. Blackwell Publishers, Malden, Mass (1999).
266.
Barrett, J.: The mythical landscapes of the British Iron Age. In: Archaeologies of landscape: contemporary perspectives. pp. 253–265. Blackwell Publishers, Malden, Mass (1999).
267.
Bender, B.: Theorising landscapes, and the prehistoric landscape of Stonehenge. Man. 27, 735–755 (1992).
268.
Bender, B., Tilley, C.Y., Anderson, E., Hamilton, S.: Chapters 1 and 3. In: Stone worlds: narrative and reflexivity in landscape archaeology. Left Coast Press, Walnut Creek, Calif (2007).
269.
Bender, B., Hamilton, S., Tilley, C.: Leskernick: Stone Worlds; Alternative Narratives; Nested Landscapes. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society. 63, 147–178 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0079497X00002413.
270.
Brück, J.: Experiencing the past? The development of a phenomenological archaeology in British prehistory. Archaeological Dialogues. 12, 45–72 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1017/S1380203805001583.
271.
Thomas, Julian, David, Bruno: Handbook of landscape archaeology. Left Coast Press, Walnut Creek, Calif (2008).
272.
Fleming, A.: Phenomenology and the Megaliths of Wales: A Dreaming Too Far? Oxford Journal of Archaeology. 18, 119–125 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-0092.00074.
273.
Fleming, A.: Post-processual landscape archaeology: A critique. Cambridge Archaeological Journal. 16, 267–280 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0959774306000163.
274.
Gheorghiu, D., Nash, G.: Place as material culture: objects, geographies and the construction of time. Cambridge Scholars Pub, Newcastle (2013).
275.
Hamilton et al., S.: Quarried away: thinking about landscapes of megalithic construction on Rapa Nui (Easter Island). In: Handbook of landscape archaeology. pp. 176–186. Left Coast Press, Walnut Creek, Calif (2008).
276.
Hamilton, S., Whitehouse, R., Brown, K., Combes, P., Herring, E., Thomas, M.S.: Phenomenology in Practice: Towards a Methodology for a `Subjective’ Approach. European Journal of Archaeology. 9, 31–71 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1177/1461957107077704.
277.
Wagstaff, J. Malcolm: Landscape and culture: geographical and archaeological perspectives. Basil Blackwell, Oxford (1987).
278.
Ingold, T.: The temporality of the landscape. World Archaeology. 25, 152–174 (1993).
279.
Lake, M.: Viewing space. World Archaeology. 39, 1–3 (2007).
280.
Llobera, M.: Exploring the topography of mind: GIS, social space and archaeology. Antiquity. 70, 612–622 (1996).
281.
McGlade, J.: Archaeology and the evolution of cultural landscapes: towards an interdisciplinary agenda. In: The archaeology and anthropology of landscape: shaping your landscape. pp. 458–482. Routledge, London (1999).
282.
Thomas, J.S.: The politics of vision and the archaeologies of landscape. In: Landscape: politics and perspectives. pp. 19–48. Berg, New York (1993).
283.
Tilley, C., Bennett, W.: An archaeology of super-natural places: the case of West Penwith. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute. 7, 335–362 (2001).
284.
Tilley, C.Y.: The powers of rocks: Topography and monument construction on Bodmin Moor. World Archaeology. 28, 161–176 (1996).
285.
Tilley, C.: Round Barrows and Dykes as Landscape Metaphors. Cambridge Archaeological Journal. 14, 185–203 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0959774304000125.
286.
Tilley, C.Y.: Phenomenological approaches to landscape archaeology. In: Handbook of landscape archaeology. pp. 271–276. Left Coast Press, Walnut Creek, Calif (2008).
287.
Ucko, P.J., Layton, R.: Introduction: gazing on the landscape and encountering the environment. In: The archaeology and anthropology of landscape: shaping your landscape. pp. 1–20. Routledge, London (1999).
288.
Wheatley, D.: Cumulative viewshed analysis: a GIS-based method for investigating inter-visibility and its archaeological implication. In: Archaeology and geographical information systems: a European perspective. pp. 171–186. Taylor & Francis, Bristol, PA (1995).
289.
Binford, L.R.: Interassemblage variability: The Mousterian and the functional argument. In: Working at archaeology. pp. 131–153. Academic Press, New York (1983).
290.
Dobres, M.-A., Hoffman, C.R.: Social agency and the dynamics of prehistoric technology. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory. 1, 211–258 (1994).
291.
Schiffer, M.B., Skibo, J.M.: The explanation of artifact variability. American Antiquity. 62, 27–50 (1997).
292.
SILLAR, B., TITE, M.S.: THE CHALLENGE OF ‘TECHNOLOGICAL CHOICES’FOR MATERIALS SCIENCE APPROACHES IN ARCHAEOLOGY. Archaeometry. 42, 2–20 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-4754.2000.tb00863.x.
293.
Arnold, D.E.: Chapters 5, 8 and 9. In: Ceramic theory and cultural process. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1985).
294.
Binford, L.R.: Archaeology as anthropology. American Antiquity. 28, 217–225 (1962).
295.
Hastorf, Christine Ann, Conkey, Margaret Wright: The uses of style in archaeology. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1989).
296.
Dobres, M.-A.: Social agency and practice: the heart and soul of technology. In: Technology and social agency: outlining a practice framework for archaeology. pp. 127–163. Blackwell Publishers, Oxford (2000).
297.
Hoffman, Christopher R., Dobres, Marcia-Anne: The social dynamics of technology: practice, politics, and world views. Smithsonian Institution Press, London (1999).
298.
Robb, J.E., Dobres, M.-A.: Agency in archaeology: Paradigm or Platitude? In: Agency in archaeology. pp. 3–17. Routledge, London (2000).
299.
Dunnell, R.C.: Style and function: A fundamental dichotomy. American Antiquity. 43, 192–202 (1978).
300.
Hegmon, M.: Archaeological research on style. Annual Review of Anthropology. 21, 517–536 (1992). https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.an.21.100192.002505.
301.
Hill, J.N., Evans, R.K.: A model for classification and typology. In: Models in archaeology. pp. 231–273. Methuen, London (1972).
302.
Hodder, I.: Material practice, symbolism and ideology. In: Theory and practice in archaeology. pp. 201–212. Routledge, London (1992).
303.
Hodder, Ian: Symbols in action: ethnoarchaeological studies of material culture. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1982).
304.
Hodder, I.: Post-modernism, post-structuralism and post-processual archaeology. In: The meanings of things: material culture and symbolic expression. pp. 64–78. Unwin Hyman, HarperCollins Academic, London (1989).
305.
Karlin, C., Julien, M.: Prehistoric technology: a cognitive science? In: The ancient mind: elements of cognitive archaeology. pp. 152–163. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1994).
306.
Lemonnier, P.: The study of material culture today: Toward an anthropology of technical systems. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology. 5, 147–186 (1986). https://doi.org/10.1016/0278-4165(86)90012-7.
307.
Martinón-Torres, M.: Chaîne Opératoire: The concept and its aplications within the study of technology. Gallaecia. 21, 29–43 (2002).
308.
Nelson, M.C.: The study of technological organization. Archaeological Method and Theory. 3, 57–100 (1991).
309.
Pfaffenberger, B.: Social Anthropology of Technology. Annual Review of Anthropology. 21, 491–516 (1992). https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.an.21.100192.002423.
310.
James R. Sackett: The Meaning of Style in Archaeology: A General Model. American Antiquity. 42, 369–380 (1977).
311.
Schlanger , N.: Mindful technology: unleashing the Chaine operatoire for an archaeology of mind. In: The ancient mind: elements of cognitive archaeology. pp. 143–151. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1994).
312.
Sigault, F.: Technology. In: Companion encyclopedia of anthropology. pp. 420–459. Routledge, London (2002).
313.
Sinclair, A.: Constellations of knowledge: human agency and material affordance in lithic technology. In: Agency in archaeology. pp. 196–212. Routledge, London (2000).
314.
Tilley, Christopher Y.: Metaphor and material culture. Blackwell Publishers, Oxford (1999).
315.
van der Leeuw, S.: Dust to dust: a transformational view of the ceramic cycle. In: The many dimensions of pottery: ceramics in archaeology and anthropology. pp. 709–733. Universiteit van Amsterdam, Amsterdam (1984).
316.
Wiessner, P.: Style and changing relations between the individual and society. In: The meanings of things: material culture and symbolic expression. pp. 56–63. Unwin Hyman, HarperCollins Academic, London (1989).
317.
Wobst, H.M.: Stylistic behavior ad information exchange. In: For the director: research essays in honor of James B. Griffin. pp. 317–342. Museum of Anthropology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor (1977).
318.
Wobst, H.M.: Style in archaeology or archaeologists in style. In: Material meanings: critical approaches to the interpretation of material culture. pp. 118–132. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City (1999).
319.
Chris Gosden: What Do Objects Want? Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory. 12, 193–211 (2005).
320.
Robb, J.E.: The archaeology of symbols. Annual Review of Anthropology. 27, 329–346 (1998). https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.anthro.27.1.329.
321.
Sillar, B.: The Social Agency of Things? Animism and Materiality in the Andes. Cambridge Archaeological Journal. 19, 367–377 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0959774309000559.
322.
Bentley , A.: ‘Style versus function’ 30 years on. In: Evolutionary and interpretive archaeologies: a dialogue. pp. 83–104. Left Coast, Walnut Creek, Calif (2011).
323.
Chilton, Elizabeth S.: Material meanings: critical approaches to the interpretation of material culture. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City (1999).
324.
Cochrane, E.E.: Style, function and systematic empiricism: the conflation of process and pattern. In: Style and function: conceptual issues in evolutionary archaeology. pp. 183–202. Bergin & Garvey, London (2001).
325.
Renfrew, Colin, DeMarrais, Elizabeth, Gosden, Chris: Rethinking materiality: the engagement of mind with the material world. McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, Cambridge (2004).
326.
Ferguson, L.: Struggling with pots in colonial South Carolina. In: The archaeology of inequality. pp. 28–39. Blackwell, Oxford (1991).
327.
Gosden, C., Marshall, Y.: The cultural biography of objects. World Archaeology. 31, 169–178 (1999).
328.
Hodder, I.: Human-thing entanglement: towards an integrated archaeological perspective. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute. 17, 154–177 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9655.2010.01674.x.
329.
Hodder, I.: Entangled: an archaeology of the relationships between humans and things. Wiley-Blackwell, Chichester (2012).
330.
Ingold, T.: Materials against materiality. Archaeological Dialogues. 14, 1–16 (2007). https://doi.org/10.1017/S1380203807002127.
331.
Thomas, Julian, Jorge, Vítor Oliveira, Theoretical Archaeology Group (England): Overcoming the modern invention of material culture: proceedings of the TAG session, Exeter 2006. ADECAP, Porto (2007).
332.
Knappett, C.: Photographs, Skeuomorphs and Marionettes: Some Thoughts on Mind, Agency and Object. Journal of Material Culture. 7, 97–117 (2002). https://doi.org/10.1177/1359183502007001307.
333.
Knappett, Carl: Thinking through material culture: an interdisciplinary perspective. University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia (2005).
334.
Knappet, C.: Materiality. In: Archaeological theory today. pp. 188–207. Polity, Cambridge (2012).
335.
Knappett, Carl, Malafouris, Lambros: Material agency: towards a non-anthropocentric approach. Springer, New York (2008).
336.
Layton, R.: Structuralism and semiotics. In: Handbook of material culture. pp. 29–42. SAGE, London (2006).
337.
Meskell, Lynn: Object worlds in ancient Egypt: material biographies past and present. Berg, Oxford (2004).
338.
Meskell, Lynn: Archaeologies of materiality. Blackwell, Malden, Mass (2006).
339.
Miller, D.: Artefacts and the meaning of things. In: Companion encyclopedia of anthropology. pp. 396–419. Routledge, London (2002).
340.
Miller, Daniel: Materiality. Duke University Press, Durham, N.C. (2005).
341.
O’Brien, M.J.: Style, function, transmission: an introduction. In: Style, function, transmission: evolutionary archaeological perspectives. pp. 1–32. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City (2003).
342.
Olsen, B.: Material culture after text: re‐membering things. Norwegian Archaeological Review. 36, 87–104 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1080/00293650310000650.
343.
Olsen, B.: Archaeology: the discipline of things. University of California Press, Berkeley (2012).
344.
Preucel, R., Bauer, A.: Archaeological Pragmatics. Norwegian Archaeological Review. 34, 85–96 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1080/00293650127469.
345.
Preucel, Robert W.: Archaeological semiotics. Blackwell, Oxford (2006).
346.
Sørensen, M.L.S.: Reading Dress: The Construction of Social Categories and Identities in Bronze Age Europe. Journal of European Archaeology. 5, 93–114 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1179/096576697800703656.
347.
Taylor, T.: Materiality. In: Handbook of archaeological theories. pp. 297–320. AltaMira Press, Lanham, MD (2008).
348.
Thomas, J.: Culture and identity. In: Companion encyclopedia of archaeology. pp. 431–469. Routledge, London (1999).
349.
Thomas, Julian: Archaeology and modernity. Routledge, London (2004).
350.
Bentley, R. Alexander, Maschner, Herbert D. G., Chippindale, Christopher: Handbook of archaeological theories. AltaMira Press, Lanham, Md (2008).
351.
Steven Mithen: Understanding Mind and Culture: Evolutionary Psychology or Social Anthropology? Anthropology Today. 11, 3–7 (1995).
352.
Shennan, Stephen: Genes, memes and human history: Darwinian archaeology and cultural evolution. Thames & Hudson, London (2002).
353.
Bettinger, R.L.: Hunter-gatherers: archaeological and evolutionary theory. Plenum Press, New York (1991).
354.
Boone, J.L., Smith, E.A.: Is It Evolution Yet? A Critique of Evolutionary Archaeology. Current Anthropology. 39, S141–S174 (1998). https://doi.org/10.1086/204693.
355.
Cochrane, Ethan E., Gardner, Andrew: Evolutionary and interpretive archaeologies: a dialogue. Left Coast, Walnut Creek, Calif (2011).
356.
Currie, T.E., Mace, R.: Mode and tempo in the evolution of socio-political organization: reconciling ‘Darwinian’ and ‘Spencerian’ evolutionary approaches in anthropology. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 366, 1108–1117 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2010.0318.
357.
Kristiansen, K.: Genes versus agents. A discussion of the widening theoretical gap in archaeology. Archaeological Dialogues. 11, 77–99 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1017/S1380203805211509.
358.
Mithen, S.J.: The prehistory of the mind: a search for the origins of art, religion and science. Thames & Hudson, London (1996).
359.
Mithen, S.J.: Thoughtful foragers: a study of prehistoric decision making. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge [England] (1990).
360.
Richerson, Peter J., Boyd, Robert: Not by genes alone: how culture transformed human evolution. University of Chicago Press, Chicago (2005).
361.
Rowley-Conwy, P., Layton, R., Panter-Brick, C.: Hunter-gatherers: an interdisciplinary perspective. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2001).
362.
Winterhalder, B., Kennett, D.J., Grote, M.N., Bartruff, J.: Ideal free settlement of California’s Northern Channel Islands. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology. 29, 469–490 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaa.2010.07.001.
363.
Alex Mesoudi, Andrew Whiten and Kevin N. Laland: Perspective: Is Human Cultural Evolution Darwinian? Evidence Reviewed from the Perspective of ‘The Origin of Species’. Evolution. 58, 1–11 (2004).
364.
Shennan, S.: Descent with modification and the archaeological record. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 366, 1070–1079 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2010.0380.
365.
Shennan, S.: Evolution in Archaeology. Annual Review of Anthropology. 37, 75–91 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.anthro.37.081407.085153.
366.
Andersson, C.: Paleolithic Punctuations and Equilibria: Did Retention Rather Than Invention Limit Technological Evolution? PaleoAnthropology. 243–259 (2011).
367.
Aunger, Robert: Darwinizing culture: the status of memetics as a science. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2000).
368.
R. Alexander Bentley, Matthew W. Hahn and Stephen J. Shennan: Random Drift and Culture Change. Proceedings: Biological Sciences. 271, 1443–1450 (2004).
369.
Maschner, Herbert D. G., Chippindale, Christopher, Bentley, R. Alexander: Handbook of archaeological theories. AltaMira Press, Lanham, MD (2008).
370.
Boyd, Robert, Richerson, Peter J.: Culture and the evolutionary process. University of Chicago Press, Chicago (1985).
371.
Mace, Ruth, Holden, Clare Janaki, Shennan, Stephen: The evolution of cultural diversity: a phylogenetic approach. UCL Press, London (2005).
372.
Coward, F., Shennan, S., Colledge, S., Conolly, J., Collard, M.: The spread of Neolithic plant economies from the Near East to northwest Europe: a phylogenetic analysis. Journal of Archaeological Science. 35, 42–56 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jas.2007.02.022.
373.
Lipo, Carl P., Society for American Archaeology: Mapping our ancestors: phylogenetic approaches in anthropology and prehistory. Aldine Transaction, New Brunswick, N.J. (2006).
374.
Shennan, Stephen: Pattern and process in cultural evolution. University of California Press, Berkeley (2009).
375.
Lyman, R.L., O’Brien, M.J.: Measuring and Explaining Change in Artifact Variation with Clade-Diversity Diagrams. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology. 19, 39–74 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1006/jaar.1999.0339.
376.
Powell, A., Shennan, S., Thomas, M.G.: Late Pleistocene Demography and the Appearance of Modern Human Behavior. Science. 324, 1298–1301 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1170165.
377.
Richerson, P.J., Boyd, R.: Not by genes alone: how culture transformed human evolution. University of Chicago Press, Chicago (2005).
378.
Shennan, Stephen: Genes, memes and human history: Darwinian archaeology and cultural evolution. Thames & Hudson, London (2002).
379.
Dobres, M.-A., Robb, J.E.: Agency in archaeology: Paradigm or platitude? In: Agency in archaeology. pp. 3–17. Routledge, London (2000).
380.
Dornan, J.L.: Agency and archaeology: Past, present and future directions. Journal of archaeological method and theory. 9, 303–329 (2002). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1021318432161.
381.
Gardner, A.: Agency. In: Handbook of archaeological theories. pp. 95–108. AltaMira Press, Lanham, Md (2008).
382.
Barrett , J.C.: Agency, the duality of structure and the problem of the archaeological record. In: Archaeological theory today. pp. 141–164. Polity, Cambridge (2012).
383.
Brumfiel, E.M.: On the archaeology of choice: agency studies as a research strategem. In: Agency in archaeology. pp. 249–255. Routledge, London (2000).
384.
Cornell, P., Fahlander, F.: Microarchaeology, materiality and social practice. Current Swedish Archaeology. 10, 21–38 (2002).
385.
Dobres, Marcia-Anne: Technology and social agency: outlining a practice framework for archaeology. Blackwell Publishers, Oxford (2000).
386.
Englehardt, J.: Agency in ancient writing. University Press of Colorado, Boulder (2013).
387.
Fewster, K.J.: The Role of Agency and Material Culture in Remembering and Forgetting: An Ethnoarchaeological Case Study from Central Spain. Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology. 20, (2006). https://doi.org/10.1558//jmea.2007.v20i1.89.
388.
Flannery, K.V.: Process and Agency in Early State Formation. Cambridge Archaeological Journal. 9, 3–21 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0959774300015183.
389.
Gardner, Andrew: An archaeology of identity: soldiers and society in late Roman Britain. Left Coast Press, Walnut Creek, Calif (2007).
390.
Gardner, A.: Action and structure in interpretive archaeologies. In: Evolutionary and interpretive archaeologies: a dialogue. pp. 63–82. Left Coast, Walnut Creek, Calif (2011).
391.
Graves-Brown, P.: In search of the watchmaker: attribution of agency in natural and cultural selection. In: Darwinian archaeologies. pp. 165–181. Plenum Press, London (1996).
392.
Johnson, M.H.: Conceptions of agency in archaeological interpretation. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology. 8, 189–211 (1989). https://doi.org/10.1016/0278-4165(89)90024-X.
393.
Knapp, A.B., van Dommelen, P.: Past Practices: Rethinking Individuals and Agents in Archaeology. Cambridge Archaeological Journal. 18, 15–34 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0959774308000024.
394.
Kent G. Lightfoot, Antoinette Martinez and Ann M. Schiff: Daily Practice and Material Culture in Pluralistic Social Settings: An Archaeological Study of Culture Change and Persistence from Fort Ross, California. American Antiquity. 63, 199–222 (1998).
395.
MacGregor, G.: Post-processual archaeology: the hidden agenda of the secret agent. In: Archaeological theory: progress or posture? pp. 79–91. Avebury, Aldershot (1994).
396.
Bentley, R.A., Maschner, H.D.G., Chippindale, C.: R. McGuire. In: Handbook of archaeological theories. pp. 73–93. AltaMira Press, Lanham, Md (2008).
397.
Meskell, Lynn, Joyce, Rosemary A.: Embodied lives: figuring ancient Maya and Egyptian experience. Routledge, London (2003).
398.
Meskell, Lynn: Archaeologies of social life: age, sex, class et cetera in ancient Egypt. Blackwell, Oxford (1999).
399.
Miller, D., Tilley, C.Y.: Ideology, power and prehistory: An introduction. In: Ideology, power and prehistory. pp. 1–15. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1984).
400.
Pauketat, T.R.: Practice and history in archaeology: An emerging paradigm. Anthropological Theory. 1, 73–98 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1177/146349960100100105.
401.
Patterson, T.: Social archaeology and Marxist social thought. In: A companion to social archaeology. pp. 66–81. Blackwell Pub. Ltd, Malden, MA. (2004).
402.
Shanks, M., Tilley, C.Y.: The individual and the social. In: Social theory and archaeology. pp. 61–78. Polity in association with Blackwell, Cambridge (1987).
403.
Shennan, S.J.: An evolutionary perspective on the goals of archaeology. In: Evolutionary and interpretive archaeologies: a dialogue. pp. 325–344. Left Coast, Walnut Creek, Calif (2011).
404.
Thomas, J.: Humanism and the individual: chapter 6. In: Archaeology and modernity. pp. 119–148. Routledge, London (2004).
405.
Strauss, C.: Blaming for Columbine. Current Anthropology. 48, 807–832 (2007). https://doi.org/10.1086/520975.
406.
Bruce G. Trigger: Marxism in Contemporary Western Archaeology. Archaeological Method and Theory. 5, 159–200 (1993).
407.
VanPool, T.L., VanPool, C.S.: Agency and evolution: the role of intended and unintended consequences of action. In: Essential tensions in archaeological method and theory. pp. 89–113. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City (2003).
408.
Brück, J.: Monuments, power and personhood in the British Neolithic. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute. 7, 649–667 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9655.00082.
409.
Fowler, C.: Personhood and Social Relations in the British Neolithic with a Study from the Isle of Man. Journal of Material Culture. 6, 137–163 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1177/135918350100600202.
410.
Jones, S.: Discourses of identity in the interpretation of the past. In: Interpretive archaeology: a reader. pp. 445–457. Leicester University Press, London (2000).
411.
Joyce, R.A.: Archaeology of the Body. Annual Review of Anthropology. 34, 139–158 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.anthro.33.070203.143729.
412.
Carrithers, M., Collins, S., Lukes, S. eds: The category of the person: anthropology, philosophy, history. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1985).
413.
Casella, Eleanor Conlin, Fowler, Chris: The archaeology of plural and changing identities: beyond identification. Kluwer Academic/Plenum, London (2005).
414.
Díaz-Andreu García, Margarita: The archaeology of identity: approaches to gender, age, status, ethnicity and religion. Routledge, London (2005).
415.
Geoff Emberling: Ethnicity in Complex Societies: Archaeological Perspectives. Journal of Archaeological Research. 5, 295–344 (1997).
416.
Fowler, Chris: The archaeology of personhood: an anthropological approach. Routledge, London (2004).
417.
Fowler, C.: The individual, the subject and archaeological interpretation: reading Luce Irigaray and Judith Butler. In: Philosophy and archaeological practice: perspectives for the 21st century. pp. 107–122. Bricoleur Press, Göteborg (2000).
418.
Gardner, Andrew: An archaeology of identity: soldiers and society in late Roman Britain. Left Coast Press, Walnut Creek, Calif (2007).
419.
Hales, Shelley, Hodos, Tamar: Material culture and social identities in the ancient world. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2010).
420.
Jones, S.: The archaeology of ethnicity: constructing identities in the past and present. Routledge, London (1997).
421.
Jones, S.: Ethnicity: theoretical approaches, methodological implications. In: Handbook of archaeological theories. pp. 321–333. AltaMira Press, Lanham, MD (2008).
422.
Knapp, A.B., Meskell, L.: Bodies of Evidence on Prehistoric Cyprus. Cambridge Archaeological Journal. 7, 183–204 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0959774300001931.
423.
Meskell, Lynn: Archaeologies of social life: age, sex, class et cetera in ancient Egypt. Blackwell, Oxford (1999).
424.
Meskell, Lynn, Joyce, Rosemary A.: Embodied lives: figuring ancient Maya and Egyptian experience. Routledge, London (2003).
425.
Meskell, L.: Archaeologies of identity. In: Archaeological theory today. pp. 187–213. Polity, Cambridge (2012).
426.
Pluciennik, Mark, Tarlow, Sarah, Hamilakis, Yannis: Thinking through the body: archaeologies of corporeality. Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers, London (2002).
427.
Rautman, Alison E., Gender and Archaeology Conference: Reading the body: representations and remains in the archaeological record. University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia (2000).
428.
Ross, Jennifer C., Steadman, Sharon R.: Agency and identity in the ancient Near East: new paths forward. Equinox, London (2010).
429.
Smith, Stuart Tyson: Wretched Kush: ethnic identities and boudaries in Egypt’s Nubian empire. Routledge, London (2003).
430.
Sofaer, Joanna R.: The body as material culture: a theoretical osteoarchaeology. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2006).
431.
Stark, Miriam T.: The archaeology of social boundaries. Smithsonian Institution Press, London (1998).
432.
Thomas, J.: Culture and identity. In: Companion encyclopedia of archaeology. pp. 431–469. Routledge, London (1999).
433.
Thomas, J.: Chapter 6. In: Archaeology and modernity. Routledge, London (2004).
434.
Whitehouse, R.: Cultural and biological approaches to the body in archaeology: can they be reconciled?" . In: Evolutionary and interpretive archaeologies: a dialogue. pp. 227–244. Left Coast, Walnut Creek, Calif (2011).
435.
Whitley, J.: Homer’s Entangled Objects: Narrative, Agency and Personhood In and Out of Iron Age Texts. Cambridge Archaeological Journal. 23, 395–416 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1017/S095977431300053X.
436.
Wilkinson, D.: The Emperor’s New Body: Personhood, Ontology and the Inka Sovereign. Cambridge Archaeological Journal. 23, 417–432 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0959774313000541.
437.
Yates, T.: Frameworks for an archaeology of the body. In: Interpretative archaeology. pp. 31–72. Berg, New York (1992).
438.
Conkey, M.W., Gero, J.M.: Programme to Practice: Gender and Feminism in Archaeology. Annual Review of Anthropology. 26, 411–437 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.anthro.26.1.411.
439.
Whitehouse, R.: Feminism and archaeology: An awkward relationship. Papers from the Institute of Archaeology. 9, 1–7 (1998).
440.
Wylie, A.: The interplay of evidential constraints and political interests: Recent archaeological research on gender. American Antiquity. 57, 15–35 (1992).
441.
Carr, Lydia: Tessa Verney Wheeler: women and archaeology before World War Two. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2012). https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:osobl/9780199640225.001.0001.
442.
Margaret W. Conkey: Questioning Theory: Is There a Gender of Theory in Archaeology? Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory. 14, 285–310 (2007).
443.
Conkey, M.W., Spector, J.D.: Archaeology and the Study of Gender. Advances in Archaeological Method and Theory. 7, 1–38 (1984).
444.
Dowson, T.A.: Homosexuality, queer theory and archaeology. In: Interpretive archaeology: a reader. pp. 283–289. Leicester University Press, London (2000).
445.
Engelstad, E.: Images of power and contradiction: Feminist theory and post-processual archaeology. Antiquity. 65, 502–514 (1991).
446.
Geller, P.L.: Identity and Difference: Complicating Gender in Archaeology. Annual Review of Anthropology. 38, 65–81 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-anthro-091908-164414.
447.
Gilchrist, R.: Archaeology and the life course: a time and age for gender. In: A companion to social archaeology. pp. 142–160. Blackwell Pub. Ltd, Malden, MA. (2004).
448.
Gilchrist, R.: Women’s archaeology? Political feminism, gender theory and historical revision. Antiquity. 65, 495–501 (1991).
449.
Hamilton, S., Whitehouse, R., Wright, K.I.: Introduction and section 1. In: Archaeology and women: ancient & modern issues. pp. 13–40. Left Coast Press, Walnut Creek, Calif (2007).
450.
Hastorf, C.: Gender, space and food in prehistory. In: Engendering archaeology: women and prehistory. pp. 132–159. Blackwell, Oxford (1991).
451.
Hays-Gilpin, K.: Gender. In: Handbook of archaeological theories. pp. 335–349. AltaMira Press, Lanham, MD (2008).
452.
Hill, E.: Gender-informed archaeology: The priority of definition, the use of analogy, and the multivariate approach. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory. 5, 99–128 (1998). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02428417.
453.
Joyce, R.: Embodied subjectivity: gender, feminity, masculinity, sexuality. In: A companion to social archaeology. pp. 82–95. Blackwell Pub. Ltd, Malden, MA. (2004).
454.
Moore, H.L.: Bodies on the move: gender, power and material culture. In: A passion for difference: essays in anthropology and gender. pp. 71–85. Polity, Cambridge (1994).
455.
Nelson, Sarah M.: Handbook of gender in archaeology. AltaMira Press, Lanham, MD (2006).
456.
Pope, R.: Processual archaeology and gender politics. The loss of innocence. Archaeological Dialogues. 18, 59–86 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1017/S1380203811000134.
457.
Pope, R.: Processual archaeology and gender politics. The loss of innocence. Archaeological Dialogues. 18, 59–86 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1017/S1380203811000134.
458.
Rega, E.: Age, gender and biological reality in the Early Bronze Age cemetery at Mokrin. In: Invisible people and processes: writing gender and childhood into European archaeology. pp. 229–247. Leicester University Press, London (1996).
459.
Sørensen, Marie Louise Stig: Gender archaeology. Polity Press, Cambridge (2000).
460.
Spector, J.: What this awl means: towards a feminist archaeology. In: Engendering archaeology: women and prehistory. pp. 388–406. Blackwell, Oxford (1991).
461.
Treherne, P.: The warrior’s beauty: the masculine body and self-identity in Bronze Age Europe. Journal of European archaeology: journal of the European Association of Archaeologists. 3, 105–144 (1995).
462.
Tringham, R.: Engendered places in prehistory. In: Interpretive archaeology: a reader. pp. 329–357. Leicester University Press, London (2000).
463.
Wylie, A.: Gender theory and the archaeological record: Why is there no archaeology of gender? In: Engendering archaeology: women and prehistory. pp. 31–54. Blackwell, Oxford (1991).
464.
Alison Wylie: Doing Archaeology as a Feminist: Introduction. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory. 14, 209–216 (2007).
465.
Kohl, P.L.: Nationalism and archaeology: On the Constructions of Nations and the Reconstructions of the Remote Past. Annual Review of Anthropology. 27, 223–246 (1998). https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.anthro.27.1.223.
466.
Tilley, C.Y.: Archaeology as socio-political action in the present. In: Critical traditions in contemporary archaeology: essays in the philosophy, history and socio-politics of archaeology. pp. 104–116. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1989).
467.
Trigger, B.G.: Alternative archaeologies: Nationalist, colonialist, imperialist. Man. 19, 355–370 (1984).
468.
Arnold, B.: The past as propaganda: Totalitarian archaeology in Nazi Germany. Antiquity. 64, 464–478 (1990).
469.
Banks, Iain, O’Sullivan, Jerry, Atkinson, John A., Scottish Archaeological Forum: Nationalism and archaeology: Scottish Archaeological Forum. Cruithne Press, Glasgow (1996).
470.
Reinhard Bernbeck and Susan Pollock: Ayodhya, Archaeology, and Identity. Current Anthropology. 37, S138–S142 (1996).
471.
Bernbeck, R., Pollock, S.: The political economy of archaeological practice and the production of heritage in the Middle East. In: A companion to social archaeology. pp. 335–352. Blackwell Pub. Ltd, Malden, MA. (2004).
472.
Colwell-Chanthaphonh, C.: Archaeology and indigenous collaboration. In: Archaeological theory today. pp. 267–291. Polity, Cambridge (2012).
473.
Fagan, Garrett G.: Archaeological fantasies: how pseudoarchaeology misrepresents the past and misleads the public. Routledge, London (2006).
474.
Fowler, D.: Archaeological ethics in context and practice. In: Handbook of archaeological theories. pp. 409–422. AltaMira Press, Lanham, MD (2008).
475.
Gosden, C.: Postcolonial archaeology. Issues of culture, identity and knowledge. In: Archaeological theory today. pp. 241–261. Polity, Cambridge (2012).
476.
Gosden, C.: The past and foreign countries: colonial and post-colonial archaeology and anthropology. In: A companion to social archaeology. pp. 161–178. Blackwell Pub. Ltd, Malden, MA. (2004).
477.
James, Simon: The Atlantic Celts: ancient people or modern invention? British Museum Press, London (1999).
478.
Kohl, P.L., Fawcett, C.: Archaeology in the service of the state: theoretical considerations. In: Nationalism, politics, and the practice of archaeology. pp. 3–18. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1995).
479.
Kohl, P.L.: Nationalism and Archaeology: On the Constructions of Nations and the Reconstructions of the Remote Past. Annual Review of Anthropology. 27, 223–246 (1998). https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.anthro.27.1.223.
480.
Layton, Robert: Who needs the past?: indigenous values and archaeology. Routledge, London (1994).
481.
Leone et al., M.: Can an African-American historical archaeology be an alternative voice? In: Interpreting archaeology: finding meaning in the past. pp. 110–124. Routledge, London (1994).
482.
Leone, Mark P.: The archaeology of liberty in an American capital: excavations in Annapolis. University of California Press, Berkeley (2005).
483.
Leone, M., Preucel, R.: Archaeology in a democratic society: a critical perspective. In: Quandaries and quests: visions of archaeology’s future. pp. 115–135. Center for Archaeological Investigations, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale, [Carbondale, Ill.] (1992).
484.
McGuire, R.: Contested pasts: archaeology and Native Americans. In: A companion to social archaeology. pp. 374–395. Blackwell Pub. Ltd, Malden, MA. (2004).
485.
McGuire, Randall H.: Archaeology as political action. University of California Press, Berkeley (2008).
486.
Meskell, Lynn: Archaeology under fire: nationalism, politics and heritage in the Eastern Mediterranean and Middle East. Routledge, London (1998).
487.
Meskell, L.: The Intersections of Identity and Politics in Archaeology. Annual Review of Anthropology. 31, 279–301 (2002). https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.anthro.31.040402.085457.
488.
Murray, T.: Communication and the importance of disciplinary communities: who owns the past? In: Archaeological theory: who sets the agenda? pp. 105–116. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1993).
489.
Pearson, M.P., Schadla-Hall, T., Moshenska, G.: Resolving the Human Remains Crisis in British Archaeology. Papers from the Institute of Archaeology. 21, 5–9 (2011). https://doi.org/10.5334/pia.369.
490.
Ratnagar, S.: Archaeology at the Heart of a Political Confrontation: The Case of Ayodhya. Current Anthropology. 45, 239–259 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1086/381044.
491.
Reid, Donald M.: Whose pharaohs?: archaeology, museums, and Egyptian national identity from Napoleon to World War I. University of California Press, Berkeley, Calif (2002).
492.
Saitta, Dean J.: The archaeology of collective action. University Press of Florida, Gainesville (2007).
493.
Smith, Laurajane: Archaeological theory and the politics of cultural heritage. Routledge, London (2004).
494.
Stottman, M. Jay: Archaeologists as activists: can archaeologists change the world? University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa (2010).
495.
Tarlow, S., Stutz, L.N.: Can an archaeologist be a public intellectual? Archaeological Dialogues. 20, 1–5 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1017/S1380203813000032.
496.
Thomas, David Hurst: Skull wars: Kennewick man, archaeology, and the battle for Native American identity. Basic Books, New York, N.Y. (2000).
497.
Trigger, B.G.: Archaeology and the image of the American Indian. American Antiquity. 45, 662–676 (1980).
498.
Wylie, A.: The interplay of evidential constraints and political interests: Recent archaeological research on gender. American Antiquity. 57, 15–35 (1992).
499.
Wylie, A.: Alternative histories. Epistemic disunity and political integrity. In: Making alternative histories: the practice of archaeology and history in non-Western settings. pp. 255–272. School of American Research Press, Santa Fe, N.M (1995).
500.
Zimmerman, Larry J., Vitelli, Karen D., Hollowell-Zimmer, Julie: Ethical issues in archaeology. Altamira Press, Walnut Creek, CA (2003).
501.
Clarke, D.L.: Archaeology: the loss of innocence. Antiquity. 47, 6–18 (1973).
502.
Ian Hodder: Postprocessual Archaeology. Advances in Archaeological Method and Theory. 8, 1–26 (1985).
503.
Tilley, C.: Round Barrows and Dykes as Landscape Metaphors. Cambridge Archaeological Journal. 14, 185–203 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0959774304000125.
504.
Fisher, P., Farrelly, C., Maddocks, A., Ruggles, C.: Spatial Analysis of Visible Areas from the Bronze Age Cairns of Mull. Journal of Archaeological Science. 24, 581–592 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1006/jasc.1996.0142.
505.
Flannery, K.V.: Process and Agency in Early State Formation. Cambridge Archaeological Journal. 9, 3–21 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0959774300015183.
506.
Joyce, R.A.: Unintended Consequences? Monumentality as a Novel Experience in Formative Mesoamerica. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory. 11, 5–29 (2004).
507.
Megaw, J.V.S., Megaw, M.R.: Ancient Celts and Modern Ethnicity. Antiquity. 70, 175–181 (1996).
508.
James, S.: Celts, politics and motivation in archaeology. Antiquity. 72, 200–209 (1998).
509.
VanPool, C.S., VanPool, T.L.: The scientific nature of post-processualism. American Antiquity. 64, 33–53 (1999).
510.
Arnold III, P.J., Wilkens, B.S.: On the VanPools’ ‘scientific’ post-processualism. American Antiquity. 66, 361–366 (2001).
511.
Hutson, S.R.: Synergy through disunity, science as social practice: Comments on VanPool and VanPool. American Antiquity. 66, 349–360 (2001).
512.
VanPool, T.L., VanPool, C.S.: Postprocessualism and the nature of science: A response to comments by Hutson and Arnold and Wilkens. American Antiquity. 66, 367–375 (2001).
513.
Hodder, I.: ‘Always momentary, fluid and flexible’: Towards a reflexive excavation methodology. Antiquity. 71, 691–700 (1997).
514.
Hassan, F.: Beyond the surface: Comments on Hodder’s reflexive excavation methodology. Antiquity. 71, 1020–1025 (1997).
515.
Hodder, I.: Whose rationality? A response to Fekri Hassan. Antiquity. 72, 213–217 (1998).
516.
Bamforth, D.B.: Evidence and metaphor in evolutionary archaeology. American Antiquity. 67, 435–452 (2002).
517.
O’Brien, M.J., Lyman, R.L., Leonard, R.D.: What is evolution? A response to Bamforth. American Antiquity. 68, 573–580 (2003).
518.
Bamforth, D.B.: What is archaeology? (Or confusion, sound and fury, signifying....). American Antiquity. 68, 581–584 (2003).