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List of contents
1. Archaeological networks and social interaction
2. Relational concepts and challenges to network analysis in social archaeology
3. Entangled identities: processes of status construction in late Urnfield burials
4. Distributed feasts: reciprocity, hospitality and banquets in Iron Age to Orientalising central and southern Italy
5. Marble networks: social interaction in houses at Pompeii
6. Objects that bind, objects that separate
7. A complex beadwork: bead trade and trade beads in Scandinavia ca. 800-1000 AD revisited
8. Social network analysis and the social interactions that define Hopewell
9. Terrestrial communication networks and political agency in Early Iron Age Central Italy (950-500 BCE): a bottom-up approach
About the author
Lieve Donnellan is Assistant Professor of Classical Archaeology at Aarhus University in Denmark. She specialises in the study of networks and forms of interaction in the Ancient Mediterranean and has a keen interest in digital methodologies and archaeological theories.
Summary
Archaeological Networks and Social Interaction focuses on conceptualisations of human interaction, human-thing entanglement, material affordances and agency. This book will be of interest to archaeologists wishing to access the latest research on networks and interconnectivity.