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|a 9783319930121
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|a Buikstra, Jane E.
|9 42642
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|a Bioarchaeologists speak out :
|b deep time perspectives on contemporary issues.
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|a 1 online resource (339 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 -- Preface -- Contents -- Contributors -- About the Editor -- Chapter 1: Bioarchaeologists Speak Out: An Introduction -- Introduction -- Defining Bioarchaeology -- Bioarchaeology's Visible Successes -- Popular Perceptions of Archaeology -- Public Opinion and Heritage Tourism -- Archaeology as Popular Culture: Time Travel and Heritage Studies -- Introduction to the Chapters in this Volume -- Best-Practice Methods in Communication -- The Task at Hand: Conveying Important Messages Without Sensationalizing -- Writing for Your Audience -- Conclusions and Crosscutting Themes -- References -- Chapter 2: Knowing Your Audience: Reactions to the Human Body, Dead and Undead -- Introduction -- A Universal Reaction to Corpses and to Death? -- Philippe Ariès -- The Pornography of Death -- Popular Culture: Late Twentieth and Early Twenty-First Centuries -- Memento Mori for the Twenty-First Century -- Symbolic Skulls and Bones -- Body and Soul/Resurrection and the Body -- Partibility, Dividuals, and Postmodern Perspectives -- Corpse Porn and Sex -- Dark Tourism to Sites of Death, Disaster, and the Macabre -- Is Dark Tourism OK? -- Studying Dark Tourism -- Posthumous Personhood in the Digital Age -- Displaying, Curating, and Studying the Dead -- Ancestral Bodies: Federal Laws and Human Remains in the USA -- Museum Displays of Human Remains in the USA -- Ancestral Bodies: Laws and Repatriation in the UK -- Displaying Human Remains in the UK -- Body Worlds -- Concluding Comments -- References -- Chapter 3: Bioarchaeological Evidence for Prehistoric Violence: Use and Misuse in the Popular Media -- Introduction -- Archaeology, Heritage, and Popular Culture: Who Is the Expert? -- Warification of the Past: Misuse of the Archaeological and Historical Records -- Becoming Civilized? The Competing Perspectives and Needs of Academia, the Media, and the General Public.
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|a ebook1019
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|a Online publication
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590 |
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|a fys2019
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505 |
8 |
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|a Civilizing Public Narratives -- Communicating the Past: Navigating the Media in Academia -- Interpreting and Misinterpreting New aDNA Evidence from Prehistoric Peoples -- The Lure of Cannibalism and Violent Women -- Case Studies of Violence -- Ötzi the Iceman and Dark Tourism -- Herxheim and the Question of Mass Cannibalism in Neolithic Europe -- Lake Turkana and the Question of the Earliest Warfare -- Bridging the Gap: Experimental Bioarchaeology -- Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 4: Bridging the Precontact and Postcontact Divide in Eastern North America: Prior Conditions Set the Stage for Historic Period Outcomes -- Introduction -- Conventional Good-To-Bad Scenario -- Population Estimates -- Intergroup Conflict -- Scenario Origin -- Population Distribution -- Warfare -- Precontact Population and Warfare -- Early Postcontact Events -- European Explorations -- Populations and Disease -- Beyond Disease Mortality -- Group Movement -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 5: Misconceptions About the Bioarchaeology of Plague -- Introduction -- Bioarchaeology and Paleomicrobiology of Plague -- Black Death Selectivity -- Pre-Black Death Trends (c. 1000-1350 AD) -- Post-Black Death Trends (c. 1350-1539 AD) -- Paleomicrobiology of Plague -- Benefits to Living People -- Media Reporting on the Bioarchaeology and Paleomicrobiology of Plague -- Addressing Misconceptions About Bioarchaeological Research -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 6: Changing the Climate: Bioarchaeology Responds to Deterministic Thinking About Human-Environmental Interactions in the Past -- Introduction -- Climate Change as "a Significant Threat to the Health of the American People" -- Human Security Literature: A Basis for Planning and Public Policy -- The Problem with Determinist Thinking -- Anthropology as an Antidote to Determinist Thinking.
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|a An Anthropological Bioarchaeology of Climate Change: An Example from South Asian Prehistory -- Climate and Bioarchaeology in Late Holocene South Asia -- Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 7: Stone Agers in the Fast Lane? How Bioarchaeologists Can Address the Paleo Diet Myth -- Introduction -- Paleo Diet (PD) Debates -- Was There a Ubiquitous Stone Age Diet? -- PD Assumptions and Bioarchaeological Response -- What Plant Microfossils Are Revealing About the Reality of a Paleo Diet -- The Rest of the World? MetS and Gout in the Pacific Islands -- The Paleopathology of Gout in the Pacific Islands -- Gout, DISH, and the Paleo Diet -- Conclusions -- Communicating Variable Disease Susceptibility Issues to the Public -- References -- Chapter 8: Ancient Migrations: Biodistance, Genetics, and the Persistence of Typological Thinking -- Introduction -- What Is Typological Thinking? -- The Indians of Pecos Pueblo Reconsidered -- The Genomics Revolution (That Wasn't?) -- Structure and Race -- Of Blued-Eyed, Swarthy Hunters -- Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 9: Opening Up the Family Tree: Promoting More Diverse and Inclusive Studies of Family, Kinship, and Relatedness in Bioarchaeology -- Introduction -- Defining Family, Kinship, and Relatedness -- Kinship Analysis in Bioarchaeology -- Evaluating the Limited Impact and Limitations of Bioarchaeological Kinship Research -- The Limited Volume and Scope of Bioarchaeological Kinship Research -- The Biologistic Limitations of Bioarchaeological Kinship Analysis -- The Prevalence of Heteronormative Bias in Bioarchaeological Kinship Research -- Strategies for Revitalizing and Increasing the Impact of Bioarchaeological Family Research -- Building a Better Bioarchaeological Approach to Family, Kinship, and Relatedness -- Increasing the Visibility of Bioarchaeological Family Research -- Summary and Conclusion.
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|a References -- Chapter 10: The Fallacy of the Transgender Skeleton -- Introduction -- Ongoing Process: Presentism -- Creation of Tension -- The Transsexual Caveman -- Mediascapes -- Inclusion and Omission -- To Conclude... -- References -- Chapter 11: The Body-as-Evidence Paradigm in Domestic and International Forensic Anthropology -- Introduction -- The "CSI Effect" -- International Human Rights Work -- International Bodies -- Bioarchaeologists and Forensic Anthropologists: Sisters but Not Twins -- Speaking Out in Forensic Anthropology: An Action Plan -- References -- Chapter 12: Contributions of Mummy Science to Public Perception of the Past -- Introduction -- Embodied Identity: Mummies, Tattoos, and Health -- Control of the Body and Dead Body Politics -- Social Determinants of Health -- Chagas Disease -- Tuberculosis -- Conclusion -- Parting Thoughts -- References -- Chapter 13: Writing Bioarchaeological Stories to Right Past Wrongs -- Introduction -- Less Than Human? -- Affective Pathways to Empathy -- Fictive Osteobiographical Narratives as Affective Interpretation -- Case Study: Comparing Three Modes of Bioarchaeological Interpretation -- Interpretation #1: Analytical Style, Technical Language -- Interpretation #2: Analytical Style, Colloquial Language -- Interpretation #3: Affective Style, Colloquial Language -- Discussion and Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 14: Bioarchaeology and the Media: Anthropology Scicomm in a Post-Truth Landscape -- Introduction -- Anthropology Scicomm Values -- Public Intellectualism -- Diversity -- Community and Teamwork -- Writing Anthropology for the Public -- Developing a Message -- DIY Outreach -- Enlist Help -- Support Others -- Conclusions: Using Scicomm to Combat the Post-Truth Landscape -- 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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|a Paleoanthropology.
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4 |
|a Electronic books.
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|i Print version:
|t Bioarchaeologists Speak Out : Deep Time Perspectives on Contemporary Issues
|w 001550283
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|a ProQuest (Firm)
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|a Bioarchaeology and social theory
|9 129487
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856 |
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|z Available online
|u https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/dainst/detail.action?docID=5628035
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