Results 221 to 230 of about 3,945,168 (273)
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2023
Abstract This chapter explores the evolution of Catholic material culture between 1530 and 1640. It traces the iconoclastic destruction and defacement of objects and physical structures in the wake of the Reformations in England, Scotland, Wales, and Ireland.
Chad Spigel +3 more
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Abstract This chapter explores the evolution of Catholic material culture between 1530 and 1640. It traces the iconoclastic destruction and defacement of objects and physical structures in the wake of the Reformations in England, Scotland, Wales, and Ireland.
Chad Spigel +3 more
+6 more sources
2021
The goods brought into urban emporia and periodic rural markets through caravan trade were not only luxuries for elites (fine horses, for example), but also high-value items consumed in small and affordable quantities (such as silk as well as turquoise or other medicinal, talismanic or apotropaic items) by a broader range of groups.
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The goods brought into urban emporia and periodic rural markets through caravan trade were not only luxuries for elites (fine horses, for example), but also high-value items consumed in small and affordable quantities (such as silk as well as turquoise or other medicinal, talismanic or apotropaic items) by a broader range of groups.
+4 more sources
Material Culture, Cultural Material
Diogenes, 1999‘I am not yet so lost in lexicography as to forget that words are the daughters of earth, and that things are the sons of heaven. Language is only the instrument of science, and words are but the signs of ideas.’Samuel Johnson, A Dictionary of the English Language.When asked to write for a special issue of Diogenes to be entitled ‘Anthropology: The ...
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Computational Material Culture
Architectural Design, 2016Computation offers considerable possibilities for architecture, going well beyond the conventional sphere of design that focuses on the generation of complex geometries. Achim Menges, a regular contributor and guest‐editor to 2, and Founding Director of the Institute for Computational Design (ICD) at the University of Stuttgart, is renowned for his ...
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Design Management Journal (Former Series), 1995
ONE OF THE MORE SIGNIFICANT contributions designers can make to the innovation process is a creative investigation of culture, both as strategy and as input to the development of specific products. Gary Waymire, Michael Barry and Robert C. Hall are convinced, however, that such analysis must get beyond preconceptions.
Gary Waymire +2 more
openaire +1 more source
ONE OF THE MORE SIGNIFICANT contributions designers can make to the innovation process is a creative investigation of culture, both as strategy and as input to the development of specific products. Gary Waymire, Michael Barry and Robert C. Hall are convinced, however, that such analysis must get beyond preconceptions.
Gary Waymire +2 more
openaire +1 more source
Editing : Material Culture or Cultural Margins?
Textus, 2009Electronic publishing, the role of the editor, significance of publishing policies in the process of cultural ...
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2016
AbstractMaterial culture is central to all aspects of archaeology and yet it continues to be argued that things have been under-theorized in archaeological theory. The focus on this chapter is on developments in the study of material culture since the ‘material culture turn’.
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AbstractMaterial culture is central to all aspects of archaeology and yet it continues to be argued that things have been under-theorized in archaeological theory. The focus on this chapter is on developments in the study of material culture since the ‘material culture turn’.
+4 more sources

