書誌事項

Gender and hide production

edited by Lisa Frink and Kathryn Weedman

(Gender and archaeology series / series editor, Sarah Milledge Nelson, v. 11)

AltaMira Press, c2005

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注記

Bibliography: p. 215-271

Includes index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

People have processed hides for mundane, exchange, and ritual items since the earliest paleolithic cultures, yet the highly gendered nature of these activities remains obscured in archaeological research. Editors Lisa Frink and Kathryn Weedman have assembled a collection of diverse essays that take gender as a central point of orientation in hide production processes and reflect on their vast geographical and temporal range, injecting the critical cultural variable of gender into our archaeological interpretations. Chapters include ethnohistoric and ethnographic research among mobile and sedentary populations of North America, the Arctic, and Africa and their applications for understanding prehistoric, protohistoric, and contact period settings. This text will prove enlightening to researchers of archaeology , anthropology, and gender studies, as well as those interested in division of labor research.

目次

1 Foreword by Sarah Milledge Nelson 2 Chapter 1. Introduction to Gender and Hide Production 3 Chapter 2. These Boots Were Made for Walking: Moccasin Production, Gender, and the Late Prehistoric Hideworking Sequence on the High Plains of Colorado 4 Chapter 3. The Shifting Role of Women and Women's Labor on the Protohistoric Southern High Plains 5 Chapter 4. Late Prehistoric Bison Hide Production and Hunter-Gatherer Identities on the North American Plains 6 Chapter 5. Hideworking and Changes in Women's Status among the Arikara, 1700-1862 7 Chapter 6. Gender and the Hide Production Process in Colonial Western Alaska 8 Chapter 7. Gender Visibility and Division of Inupiat Labor in an Arctic Industrial Enterprise 9 Chapter 8. Examining "Universal" Hide Chewing Practices Among Alaskan Eskimos 10 Chapter 9. Expedient Angled-Tang Endscrapers: Glimpsing Women's Work in the Archaeological Record 11 Chapter 10. Hide Tanning: The Act of Reviving 12 Chapter 11. Hideworking among Descendants of Khoekhoen Pastoralists in the Northern Cape, South Africa 13 Chapter 12. Gender and Stone Tools: An Ethnographic Study of the Konso and Gamo Hideworkers of Southern Ethiopia 14 Chapter 13. Feminist Boundary Crossings: Challenging Androcentric Assumptions and Stereotypes about Hideworking 15 References 16 Index 17 About the Authors

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