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Informationen zum Autor edited by N. Brodie & C. Hills Klappentext The subject matter of archaeology is the engagement of human beings, now and in the past, with both the natural world and the material world they have created. All aspects of human activity are potentially relevant to archaeolgical research, and conversely, the ways in which others, especially artists and anthropologists, have investigated the world are of interest to archaeologists. Archaeological artefacts and sites are also used by groups and nations to establish identity, and for financial gain, both through tourism and trade in antiquities. Colin Renfrew has actively engaged with art, with politics and with the antiquities trade, and has presented his ideas to broad audiences through accesible books and television programmes, as well as championing the cause of archeology in many public roles. The papers in this volume, which have beeb written bvy colleagues and former students on the occasion of his retirement, relate to all of these subject areas, and together give some idea of the complexity of the issues raised by critical engagements with the material world, both past and present. Zusammenfassung The subject matter of archaeology is the engagement of human beings! now and in the past! with both the natural world and the material world they have created. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction (Neil Brodie & Catherine Hills); For Colin in friendship and admiration (Richard Long); A meeting of minds: art and archaeology (Antony Gormley & Colin Renfrew); 'Art makes visible': an archaeology of the senses in Minoan elite art (Christine Morris); Incavation - Excavation - Exhibition (Cornelius Holtorf); Archaeology in rock (Timothy Darvill); Flowers: New England digs 2002 (Mark Dion); The Asian art affair: US art museum collections of Asian art and archaeology (Neil Brodie & Jenny Doole); A Neocycladic harpist? (John Craxton & Peter Warren); The Parthenon Marbles as an archaeological issue (Anthony Snodgrass); But a passing moment in the long career of a monument: Colin Renfrew and Stonehenge! 1968 (Christopher Chippindale); Rejecting reflexivity? Making post-Stalinist archaeology in Albania (Richard Hodges); Material and oral records: a shamans' meeting in Pokhara (Christopher Evans). ...