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Ancient Monuments of the Mississippi Valley
Author:
Ephraim G. Squier
ISBN 13:
978-1-56098-898-4
ISBN 10:
1-56098-898-3
First published in 1848, this key document in the history of American archaeology has been updated to include a new index and bibliography, as well as a lively introduction that describes the controversies surrounding the book’s original publication.
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Anthropology Explored, Second Edition
The Best of Smithsonian AnthroNotes
Author:
Edited by Ruth Osterweis Selig, Marilyn R. London, and P. Ann Kaupp
ISBN 13:
978-1-58834-093-1
ISBN 10:
1-58834-093-7
Cutting-edge anthropology for a general audience
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Archaeology and Paleoecology of an Andean Civilization Volume 2
Urban and Rural Archaeology
Author:
Edited by Alan L. Kolata
ISBN 13:
978-1-58834-054-2
ISBN 10:
1-58834-054-6
The book presents, for the first time, a rich body of empirical data on the chronology of the Tiwanaku state; the nature of the social and political relationships between the city and its hinterland; the form and meaning of its monumental and elite architecture; and the texture of everyday life in its residential quarters.
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Artifacts of the Spanish Colonies of Florida and the Caribbean, 1500-1800
Volume 2: Portable Personal Possessions
Author:
Kathleen Deagan
ISBN 13:
978-1-58834-035-1
ISBN 10:
1-58834-035-X
This long-awaited follow-up to Deagan’s first volume on ceramics, glassware, and beads focuses on the portable personal objects owned and used by the residents of Spanish colonial America.
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Cancer in the Community
Class and Medical Authority
Author:
Martha Balshem
ISBN 13:
978-1-56098-251-7
ISBN 10:
1-56098-251-9
Focusing on deep conflicts between the medical establishment and the working class, Martha Balshem chronicles a health education project in "Tannerstown," a pseudonym for a blue-collar neighborhood in northeast Philadelphia.
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Cloth and Human Experience
Author:
Annette B. Weiner
ISBN 13:
978-0-87474-995-3
ISBN 10:
0-87474-995-6
"A book with an overwhelming scope. . . . The editors point out that cloth is a metaphor for the connectedness of society and that it has always been politically, socially, and cosmologically important.” —New York Times Book Review
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