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|a 930.1
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|a Stone, Pamela Kendall.
|9 125546
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|a Bioarchaeological Analyses and Bodies :
|b New Ways of Knowing Anatomical and Archaeological Skeletal Collections.
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|a 1 online resource (253 pages).
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|a Bioarchaeology and Social Theory Ser.
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|a Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2019. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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|a Intro -- Dedication -- Foreword -- Contents -- Chapter 1: Introduction -- New Ways of Knowing -- Why a Bioarchaeology Lens? -- Themes of the Text -- References -- Part I: Anatomical (Medical) Collections -- Chapter 2: "Whatever Was Once Associated with him, Continues to Bear his Stamp": Articulating and Dissecting George S. Huntington and His Anatomical Collection -- Introduction -- The Collection -- Human Variation -- Medicine, Dissection, and Bodies: A Necessary Bond -- Case Study: Lizzie's Extended Life Course -- (Re)Articulating Huntington and His Collection -- References -- Chapter 3: Anatomical Collections as the Anthropological Other: Some Considerations -- Introduction -- Disclaimer/Position Statement -- Context for the Discussion -- The W. Montague Cobb Skeletal Collection -- Recent Studies of the Cobb Skeletal Collection -- Anatomical Remains and Osteological Subject Making -- Anatomical Remains as the Raw Material of Scientific Knowledge Production -- Conclusions and Considerations -- References -- Chapter 4: More Than the Sum Total of Their Parts: Restoring Identity by Recombining a Skeletal Collection with Its Texts -- Introduction -- Historical Background -- Measuring Residential Segregation in the Huntington Collection -- Indices of Segregation -- Statistical Analysis -- Results -- Index of Dissimilarity for the City of New York -- Interaction Index for the City of New York -- Isolation Index for the City of New York -- Effect of Tract Dissimilarity Value on the Number of Black Individuals Collected -- Effect of Tract Interaction Values for Black Residents on the Number of Black Individuals Collected -- Effect of Tract Isolation Values for Black Residents on the Number of Individuals Collected -- Effect of Tract Income on the Number of Black Individuals Collected.
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|a ebook1019
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|a Online publication
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|a fys2019
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|a Effect of Tract Income on the Number of White Individuals Collected -- Discussion -- References -- Chapter 5: At the Intersections of Race, Poverty, Gender, and Science: A Museum Mortuary for Twentieth Century Fetuses and Infants -- Introduction -- Bioarchaeology and Fetal and Infant Collection -- The Johns Hopkins Fetal Collection -- The Sociopolitical Value of Fetal and Infant Remains -- Capturing the "Normal" Fetus: Collection and Commodification -- Fetal and Infant Value Beyond Scientific Contributions -- The Axes of Gender, Poverty, and Race -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 6: Recovering the Lived Body from Bodies of Evidence: Interrogation of Diagnostic Criteria and Parameters for Disease Ecology Reconstructed from Skeletons Within Anatomical and Medical Anatomical Collections -- Introduction -- Background -- Acquired Syphilis -- Diagnostic Criteria -- Diagnostic Criteria for Syphilis -- Medical Anatomical Skeletal Collections -- Anatomical Collections -- The Embodied Effects of Poverty, Low Socioeconomic Status, and Lifetime Exposure to Physical and Psychosocial Stressors -- Discussion and Conclusion -- References -- Part II: Archaeological Collections -- Chapter 7: Lives Lost: What Burial Vault Studies Reveal About Eighteenth-Century Identities -- Introduction -- Background -- The Burial Vault -- Other Historical Burial Vault Studies -- The Human Remains -- Heavy Metals -- Stable Isotopes -- Mitochondrial DNA -- Naming the Past -- Discussion -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 8: 'A Mass of Crooked Alphabets': The Construction and Othering of Working Class Bodies in Industrial England -- Introduction -- Case Study 1: Phossy Jaw and Matchmaking -- Case Study 2: Pauper Apprentices - North Yorkshire -- Discussion: Industrialised Bodies -- Conclusion -- References.
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|a Chapter 9: From Womb to Tomb? Disrupting the Narrative of the Reproductive Female Body -- Introduction -- Anthropology, Medicine, and Framing Difference -- From Womb to Tomb? -- Evolution and Birth -- The Obstetrical Dilemma -- Maternal Health -- Bioarchaeological Investigations -- Skeletal Analysis: Measuring the Risk of Pregnancy? -- Occupational and Reproductive Stress -- Understanding Task Differentiation Through Ethnoarchaeology and the Biological Consequences for Men and Women in Ancestral Pueblo Villages -- Maternal Mortality in the Past -- Gender Inequality, Not Reproduction -- New Models -- Conclusions -- References Cited -- Chapter 10: Mother, Laborer, Captive, and Leader: Reassessing the Various Roles that Females Held Among the Ancestral Pueblo in the American Southwest -- Introduction -- Collecting Indigenous Human Remains in the United States -- Early Skeletal Collections from the American Southwest -- Reanalyzing the Early Southwest Collections -- The Role of Females Among the Ancestral Pueblo -- Differences Between Foragers and Agriculturalists -- Methodological Approach -- Excavations: Room 33 at Pueblo Bonito, Kin Bineola, Black Mesa, and La Plata -- Chaco Canyon -- Chaco Phenomenon -- Pueblo Bonito: Room 33 -- Kin Bineola -- Black Mesa -- La Plata -- Recognizing Females: Mother, Laborer, Captive, and Leader -- Mothers -- Laborers -- Captives -- Leaders -- Discussion: The Complex Lives of Ancestral Pueblo Females -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 11: A Skull's Tale: From Middle Bronze Age Subject to Teaching Collection "Object" -- Constructing an Archaeological Subject: The "Warrior" from Middle Bronze Age Canaan -- Becoming a Teaching Collection "Object": Skull 901 AEH 66 -- Theorizing Subjects and Objects -- Re-subjectifying the Skull Through Teaching -- Conclusion -- References.
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|a Chapter 12: Conclusion: Challenging the Narrative -- Expanding the Umbrella of Bioarchaeology -- Contextualization and a Critical Bioarchaeology -- Communicating Bioarchaeology -- Engaging with Anatomical Collections -- A Bioarchaeology of Anatomy Collections -- Self-reflection -- Parting Thoughts -- References -- Index.
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|a Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.
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650 |
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|a Human remains (Archaeology).
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650 |
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0 |
|a Social archaeology..
|9 56876
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650 |
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4 |
|a Forensische Archäologie
|l de
|9 279762
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655 |
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4 |
|a Electronic books.
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776 |
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|i Print version:
|t Bioarchaeological Analyses and Bodies : New Ways of Knowing Anatomical and Archaeological Skeletal Collections
|w 001532391
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797 |
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|a ProQuest (Firm)
|
830 |
|
0 |
|a Bioarchaeology and social theory
|9 129487
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856 |
4 |
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|z Available online
|u https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/dainst/detail.action?docID=5224849
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264 |
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|b Springer,
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