Archaeologies of Attachment Emotional Attachments in the Archaeological Record /
| Korporativní autor: | |
|---|---|
| Další autoři: | , , | 
| Shrnutí: | XI, 121 p. 25 illus., 18 illus. in color. text | 
| Jazyk: | angličtina | 
| Vydáno: | Cham :
          Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer,
    
        2024. | 
| Vydání: | 1st ed. 2024. | 
| Edice: | Themes in Contemporary Archaeology, | 
| Témata: | |
| On-line přístup: | https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-66570-7 | 
| Médium: | Elektronický zdroj E-kniha | 
                Obsah: 
            
                  - Part I. Introduction
- Chapter 1. Introduction: Archaeologies of Emotion, Attachment, and Social Bonds (Bell et al)
- Chapter 2. Archaeologies of Attachment. Understanding Social Relationships, Material Culture, Religion, and Place (Bell)
- Part II. Social Bonds
- Chapter 3. Early Modern Breastfeeding Problem in Sweden. Failures to Securely Attach? (Väre)
- Chapter 4. Fragile and Resilient: Impact of Childhood Emotional Bonds and Attachment on Coping Mechanisms in Eighteenth to Nineteenth-century Finland (Lipkin)
- Chapter 5. Caring, Compassion and Clemency within the Nineteenth-century Foster Family of Clementeoffs. A case of Fictive Kinship (Tuovinen)
- Chapter 6. Phenomenological Approaches to Prehistoric Attachments. The Evidence from Prehistoric, Complete, Animal Burials of the Eastern Carpathian Basin (Daróczi)
- Part III: Emotionally Important Objects And Places
- Chapter 7. Letting Go of Attachment Objects. Insights from the ‘Problematic Stuff’ of Later Prehistoric Britain and Beyond (Büster)
- Chapter 8. Objects of Memory, Attachment, and Childhood. A Case from Roman Piedmont (Northwestern Italy) (Quercia)
- Chapter 9. Photography’s Post-Mortem. Examining Emotion and Attachment through Family Pictures (Matila)
- Part IV: Interdisciplinary Insights To Attachment-Based Archaeology
- Chapter 10. Conclusion. Towards Mentalising Archaeology: Attachment Bonds and Loneliness (Lipkin et al)
- Chapter 11. Commentary. The Application of Attachment Theory for a more Emotionally and Socially Informed Archaeology (Halcrow).