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Artefacts as Categories
A Study of Ceramic Variability in Central India
The aim of Artefacts as Categories is to ask what we can learn about a society from the variability of the objects it produces.
Daniel Miller (Author)
9780521104791, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 19 March 2009
268 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.5 cm, 0.4 kg
The aim of Artefacts as Categories is to ask what we can learn about a society from the variability of the objects it produces. Dr Miller presents a comprehensive analysis of the pottery produced in a single village in central India, drawing together and analysing a whole range of aspects - technology, function, design, symbolism and ideology - that are usually studied separately. Using the concepts of 'pragmatics', 'framing' and 'ideology', the author points to the insufficiency of many ethnographic accounts of symbolism and underlines the need to consider both the social positioning of the interpreter and the context of the interpretation when looking at artefacts. His invigorating study cogently questions many assumptions in material culture studies and offers a whole range of fresh explanations. Archaeologists in particular will welcome the discussion of familiar materials such as pottery rim shapes, body forms and decoration. However, the book will have a broad appeal to researchers in cultural studies, social anthropology and psychology and will attract all those interested in the problem of relating objects and society.
Introduction
1. The context of fieldwork
2. Creating categories: the manufacture of pottery
3. Form and function
4. The Dangwara potters and the distribution of pottery
5. An analysis of the paintings
6. The ritual context
7. A symbolic framework for the interpretation of variability
8. Pottery as categories
9. Pottery and social strategy
Conclusion: archaeology and society
Appendix
Bibliography
Index.
Subject Areas: Archaeology [HD]