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Breaking and shaping beastly bodies : animals as material culture in the Middle Ages /

Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Otros Autores: Pluskowski, Aleksander (Editor )
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Oxford ; Havertown, PA : Oxbow, 2007.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Thinking about beastly bodies / Terry O'Connor
  • Medieval bone flutes in England / Helen Leaf
  • The Middle ages on the block: animals, guilds and meat in the medieval period / Krish Seetah
  • Communicating through skin and bone: appropriating animal bodies in the medieval western European seigneurial culture / Aleksander Pluskowski
  • Taphonomy or transfiguration: do we need to change the subject? / Sue Stallibrass
  • Seeing is believing: animal material culture in medieval England / Sarah Wells
  • The beast, the book and the belt: an introduction to the study of girdle or belt books from the medieval period / Jim Bloxam
  • The shifting use of animal carcasses in medieval and post-medieval London / Lisa Yeomans
  • Hunting in the Byzantine period in the area between the Danube River and the Black Sea: archaeozoological data / Luminita Bejenaru and Carmen Tarcan
  • Chasing the ideal? Ritualism, pragmatism and the later medieval hunt in England / Richard Thomas
  • Taking sides: the social life of venison in medieval England / Naomi Sykes
  • Animals as material culture in Middle Saxon England: the zooarchaeological evidence for wool production at Brandon / Pam Crabtree
  • Animal bones: synchronous and diachronic distribution as patterns of socially determined meat consumption in the early and high Middle Ages in Central and Northern Italy / Marco Valenti and Frank Salvadori
  • People and animals in Northern Apulia from late antiquity to the early Middle Ages: some considerations / Antonella Buglione
  • Animals and economic patterns in medieval Apulia (South Italy): preliminary findings / Giovanni de Venuto
  • Breaking and shaping beastly bodies: animals as material culture in the Middle Ages: final discussion / Pam Crabtree.