Ian Hodder

ORCID: 0000-0002-7018-586X
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About
Contact & Profiles
Research Areas
  • Archaeology and ancient environmental studies
  • Historical and Cultural Archaeology Studies
  • Archaeological Research and Protection
  • Ancient Near East History
  • Ancient Mediterranean Archaeology and History
  • Archaeology and Rock Art Studies
  • Cultural Heritage Management and Preservation
  • Ancient and Medieval Archaeology Studies
  • Pleistocene-Era Hominins and Archaeology
  • Anthropological Studies and Insights
  • Anthropology: Ethics, History, Culture
  • Image Processing and 3D Reconstruction
  • Historical and Archaeological Studies
  • Ancient Egypt and Archaeology
  • Maritime and Coastal Archaeology
  • Geographies of human-animal interactions
  • 3D Surveying and Cultural Heritage
  • Forensic Anthropology and Bioarchaeology Studies
  • Archaeology and Historical Studies
  • Archaeology and Cultural Heritage
  • Cultural and Sociopolitical Studies
  • Archaeological and Historical Studies
  • Archaeological and Geological Studies
  • Metallurgy and Cultural Artifacts
  • Eurasian Exchange Networks

Stanford University
2015-2024

Koç University
2022-2024

University of Cambridge
1984-2016

St. Augustine College
2004

Middle East Technical University
2002

Merck Canada Inc. (Canada)
1999

Bridge University
1984-1993

Sussex County Community College
1991

Russell Group
1984

University of Leeds
1975-1977

1. Introduction: the nature of material cultures 2. Ethnicity and symbolism in Baringo 3. Maintaining boundaries 4. Disrupting 5. Within boundaries: age, sex self-decoration 6. Hunter-gatherers pastoralists on Leroghi plateau 7. A state symbiosis conflict: Lozi 8. Dirt, women men: a study Nuba Mountains, Sudan 9. Implications for archaeology 10. Conclusions prospects.

10.2307/3888648 article EN The South African Archaeological Bulletin 1983-12-01

Preface Introduction: towards a mature archaeology Ian Hodder Part I. Ethnographic models: pre-depositional theory: 1. Anthropological models in archaeological perspective George Dalton 2. Kalinga pottery: an ethnoarchaeological study William Longacre 3. Society, economy and culture: ethnographic case amongst the Lozi 4. People space: on material behaviour Roland Flectcher II. Settlement Pattern: despositional, post-depositional analytical 5. Stone Age visiting cards: approaches to of early...

10.2307/2801303 article EN Man 1981-09-01

Preface 1. Introduction 2. Archaeological distribution maps: a quantified approach and associated problems 3. Point pattern analysis 4. Some models for settlement patterns 5. The of single artefact types 6. association between distributions 7. relationship sites other features 8. Conclusion Appendix Index.

10.2307/202940 article EN The Journal of Interdisciplinary History 1978-01-01

10.2307/2344902 article EN Journal of the Royal Statistical Society Series A (General) 1977-01-01

In exploring human-thing entanglement I wish to make five points. (1) Humans depend on things. much of the new work in social and human sciences which humans things co-constitute each other, there is, oddly, little account themselves. (2) Things other All along chains interdependence. (3) humans. are not inert. They always falling apart, transforming, growing, changing, dying, running out. (4) The defining aspect with made is that get caught a double-bind, depending (5) Traits evolve...

10.1111/j.1467-9655.2010.01674.x article EN Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 2011-02-05

This article retreats from an entirely relational treatment of matter, to rediscover the object nature things. The thingly relations things include relations; materials provide affordances or potentialities humans. brute matter has effects on us that go beyond social networks. We cannot reduce solely relational, a semiotics To do so undermines power entrap, and particularly trap more vulnerable. In modern world, we have come see need use sustainably responsibly, care for But this...

10.1353/nlh.2014.0005 article EN New Literary History 2014-04-27

This article is concerned with the social processes involved in formation of large agglomerated villages Neolithic Near East and Anatolia, particular reference to Çatalhöyük central Turkey. The aims show that practice theories (dealing how rules are learned daily within house) can be used interpret patterning recurrent construction use activities domestic space at Çatalhöyük. regulation practices house created village-wide rules, but it argued habituated behavior was also commemorative...

10.2307/4128346 article EN American Antiquity 2004-01-01

This article suggests that accepted interpretations of variability in nonlithic material culture are insufficient. Recent ethnographic fieldwork Kenya and Zambia anthropological studies societies Sudan Nigeria demonstrate may be used by groups to communicate within-group corporateness reference outsiders. The greater the competition between for resources, likelihood will play a part maintenance internal cohesion. Distinctive types distributions associations artifacts occur as strains develop...

10.2307/279544 article EN American Antiquity 1979-07-01

This paper seeks further to define the processes of interpretation meaning in archaeology and explore public role such might play. In contrast postmodern poststructuralist perspectives, a hermeneutic debate is described that takes account critical perspective. An interpretive postprocessual needs incorporate three components: guarded objectivity data, procedures for inferring internal meanings, reflexivity. The call an position related closely new, more active roles archaeological past...

10.2307/280968 article EN American Antiquity 1991-01-01

Acknowledgements Preface 1. Introduction 2. The Domestication of Society 3. Domus in the Neolithic SE Europe 4. and Agrios 5. Dominating Boundaries Entrances: Earlier Central 6. Towards a Higher Domain: Later 7. Domes Rock: Southern Scandinavia 8. Dames Axes: Parallel Lines Development Northern France 9. Taming Landscape: Changing Idioms Power Lowland Britain 10. Beginning by Ending References.

10.2307/2164555 article EN The American Historical Review 1992-02-01
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