The Critique of Archaeological Economy
| Autor Corporativo: | |
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| Outros autores: | , | 
| Summary: | VI, 234 p. 16 illus., 12 illus. in color. text  | 
| Idioma: | inglés | 
| Publicado: | 
        Cham :
          Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer,
    
        2021.
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| Edición: | 1st ed. 2021. | 
| Series: | Frontiers in Economic History,
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| Subjects: | |
| Acceso en liña: | https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-72539-6 | 
| Formato: | Electrónico Libro | 
                Table of Contents: 
            
                  - Chapter 1 - An Introduction to the Critique of Archaeological Economy (Reinhard Jung, Stefanos Gimatzidis)
 - Chapter 2 - Writing the Deep History of Human Economy (Randall McGuire)
 - Chapter 3 - Wealth, Women's Labor, and Forms of Value: Thinking From the Study of Ancestral Central America (Rosemary A. Joyce)
 - Chapter 4 - “The Economy has no surplus”: Harry W. Pearson’s contribution revisited, 60 years later (Svend Hansen)
 - Chapter 5 - Crafting Values in Chalcolithic Cyprus and Anatolia (Bleda S. Düring)
 - Chapter 6 - The Bornhöck burial mound and the political economy of an Únětice ruler (Roberto Risch, Harald Meller, Selina Delgado-Raack, and Torsten Schunke)
 - Chapter 7 - Property and markets: the uses of land in pharaonic Egypt beyond redistributive and neoliberal approaches (Juan Carlos Moreno García)
 - Chapter 8 - Uneven and Combined: Product Exchange in the Mediterranean 3rd to 2nd Millennium BCE) (Reinhard Jung)
 - Chapter 9 - Tripod Dedication: Gift and Commodity Exchange inAncient Greece (Stefanos Gimatzidis)
 - Chapter 10 - Happily connected? The interconnectivity paradigm and the debate about the ancient economy (Jan Paul Crielaard)
 - Chapter 11 - Aegean Transport Amphoras (6th to 1st centuries BCE): Exploring Social Tension in a Path Dependency Model (Mark L. Lawall)
 - Chapter 12 - Modelling trade in Athenian pottery in the archaic and classical period (Robin Osborne).