Show Summary Details
- Title Pages
- Figures
- Tables
- Foreword
- Introduction Bioarchaeology and the Study of Violence
-
1 The Politicization of the Dead: Violence as Performance, Politics as Usual -
2 The Bioarchaeology of Structural Violence: A Theoretical Model and a Case Study -
3 Deciphering Violence in Past Societies: Ethnography and the Interpretation of Archaeological Populations -
4 The Social and Cultural Implications of Violence at Qasr Hallabat -
5 Community Violence and Everyday Life: Death at Arroyo Hondo -
6 Bioarchaeological Signatures of Strife in Terminal Pueblo III Settlements in the Northern San Juan -
7 The Space of War: Connecting Geophysical Landscapes with Skeletal Evidence of Warfare-Related Trauma -
8 Where are the Warriors?: Cranial Trauma Patterns and Conflict among the Ancient Maya -
9 Violence against Women: Differential Treatment of Local and Foreign Females in the Heartland of the Wari Empire, Peru -
10 Meaning and the Bioarchaeology of Captivity, Sacrifice, and Cannibalism: A Case Study from the Mississippian Period at Larson, Illinois -
11 Performances of Imposed Status: Captivity at Cahokia -
12 Biological Distance Analysis in Contexts of Ritual Violence - Conclusion: Implications and Future Directions
- Contributors
- Index
- Bioarchaeological Interpretations of the Human Past: Local, Regional, and Global Perspectives
(p.vii) Figures
(p.vii) Figures
- Source:
- The Bioarchaeology of Violence
- Publisher:
- University Press of Florida
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- Title Pages
- Figures
- Tables
- Foreword
- Introduction Bioarchaeology and the Study of Violence
-
1 The Politicization of the Dead: Violence as Performance, Politics as Usual -
2 The Bioarchaeology of Structural Violence: A Theoretical Model and a Case Study -
3 Deciphering Violence in Past Societies: Ethnography and the Interpretation of Archaeological Populations -
4 The Social and Cultural Implications of Violence at Qasr Hallabat -
5 Community Violence and Everyday Life: Death at Arroyo Hondo -
6 Bioarchaeological Signatures of Strife in Terminal Pueblo III Settlements in the Northern San Juan -
7 The Space of War: Connecting Geophysical Landscapes with Skeletal Evidence of Warfare-Related Trauma -
8 Where are the Warriors?: Cranial Trauma Patterns and Conflict among the Ancient Maya -
9 Violence against Women: Differential Treatment of Local and Foreign Females in the Heartland of the Wari Empire, Peru -
10 Meaning and the Bioarchaeology of Captivity, Sacrifice, and Cannibalism: A Case Study from the Mississippian Period at Larson, Illinois -
11 Performances of Imposed Status: Captivity at Cahokia -
12 Biological Distance Analysis in Contexts of Ritual Violence - Conclusion: Implications and Future Directions
- Contributors
- Index
- Bioarchaeological Interpretations of the Human Past: Local, Regional, and Global Perspectives