Ditemukan 22 dokumen yang sesuai dengan query
Bangkok: SPAFA, 1987
913.59 FIN
Buku Teks SO Universitas Indonesia Library
Rouse, Irving
New York: McGraw-Hill, 1972
301.2 ROU i
Buku Teks SO Universitas Indonesia Library
Koenigswald
Uthrecht : Prisma-Boeken, 1962
573.3 KOE s
Buku Teks Universitas Indonesia Library
Kuhn, Herbert
New York: Random House, 1955
573.3 KUH t
Buku Teks Universitas Indonesia Library
Mulvaney, D.J.
London: Thames and Hudson, [1969]
913.39 MUL p
Buku Teks SO Universitas Indonesia Library
Scheele, William E.
Cleveland: World Publishing, 1957
572.3 SCH p
Buku Teks Universitas Indonesia Library
Dallas: SMU Press, 1975
913.397 PRO
Buku Teks SO Universitas Indonesia Library
"This Book starts from the premise that methodology - the procedures for obtaining an 'objective' knowledge of the past - has always dominated archaeology to the detriment of broader social theory. It argues that social theory is archaeological theory, and that past failure to recognise this has resulted in disembodied archaeological theory and weak disciplinary practice. Ideology, Power and Prehistory therefore seeks to reinstate the primacy of social theory and the social nature of the past worlds that archaeologists seek to understand. The contributors to this book argue that past peoples, the creators of the archaeological records, should be understood as actively manipulating their own material world to represent and misrepresent their own and others' interests. Thus the concepts of ideology and power, long discussed in social and political science yet largely ignored by archaeologists, must henceforward play a central role in our understanding of the past as a social creation. Archaeologists must now consider how the material remains they study were used to create images by past societies, which do not simply mirror or reflect but actively orientate the nature of these societies."
Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press, 2012
e20528282
eBooks Universitas Indonesia Library
Barnard, Alan
""For ninety per cent of our history, humans have lived as 'hunters and gatherers', and for most of this time, as talking individuals. No direct evidence for the origin and evolution of language exists; we do not even know if early humans had language, either spoken or signed. Taking an anthropological perspective, Alan Barnard acknowledges this difficulty and argues that we can nevertheless infer a great deal about our linguistic past from what is around us in the present. Hunter-gatherers still inhabit much of the world, and in sufficient number to enable us to study the ways in which they speak, the many languages they use, and what they use them for. Barnard investigates the lives of hunter-gatherers by understanding them in their own terms, to create a book which will be welcomed by all those interested in the evolution of language"--"
Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press, 2016
417.7 BAR l
Buku Teks SO Universitas Indonesia Library
Hari Suroto
Denpasar: Udayana University Press, 2010
930.159 8 HAR p
Buku Teks SO Universitas Indonesia Library