Share
No Place Like Home: Ancient Near Eastern Houses and Households
Battini, Laura ; Brody, Aaron ; Steadman, Sharon R. (Author)
·
Archaeopress Publishing
· Paperback
No Place Like Home: Ancient Near Eastern Houses and Households - Battini, Laura ; Brody, Aaron ; Steadman, Sharon R.
£ 43.20
£ 48.00
You save: £ 4.80
Choose the list to add your product or create one New List
✓ Product added successfully to the Wishlist.
Go to My WishlistsIt will be shipped from our warehouse between
Friday, May 31 and
Monday, June 03.
You will receive it anywhere in United Kingdom between 1 and 3 business days after shipment.
Synopsis "No Place Like Home: Ancient Near Eastern Houses and Households"
No Place Like Home: Ancient Near Eastern Houses and Households had its genesis in a series of six popular and well-attended ASOR conference sessions on Household Archaeology in the Ancient Near East. A selection of papers are presented here, together with four invited contributions. The 18 chapters are organized in three thematic sections. Chapters in the first, Architecture as Archive of Social Space, profile houses as records of the lives of inhabitants, changing and adapting with residents; many offer a background focus on how human behavior is shaped by the walls of one's own home. This section also includes innovative approaches to understanding who dwelled in these homes. For instances, one chapter explores evidence for children in a house, another surveys what it was like to live in a military barracks. The middle section, The Active Household, focuses on the evidence for how residents carried out household activities including work and food preparation. Chapters include the 'heart of household archaeology' in their application of activity area research, but also drill down to the social significance of what residents were doing or eating, and where such actions were taking place. The final section, Ritual Space at Home, features studies on the house as ritual space. The entire complement of chapters provides the latest research on houses and households spanning the Chalcolithic to the Roman periods and from Turkey to Egypt.