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People Who Lived in Big Houses : Archaeological Perspectives on Large Domestic Structures (Mon. World Arch. 27), 1996, 185 p., 68 fig. -
Les structures domestiques de grandes dimensions ont toujours attiré l'attention des archéologues, mais leur interprétation souffre souvent d'un manque de mise en perspective. A travers une série d'exemples d'époques diverses, pris notamment dans le nouveau monde, ce recueil tente de poser les bases sociales, économiques et culturelles d'une compréhension générale de ce phénomène. Livre en anglais. Sommaire : G. Coupland, E.B. Banning, Introduction : The Archaeology of Big Houses ; G. Warrick, Evolution of the Iroquoian Longhouse ; M. S. Foster et al., Late Classic Period Hohokam Households : A Preliminary View from Pueblo Grande ; R. Ciolek-Torrello, Domestic Group Composition and Platform Mounds in Two Nonriverine Hohokam Communities ; C. M. Cameron, Observations on the Pueblo House and Household ; K. M. Dohm, Rooftop Zuni : Extending Household Territory Beyond Apartment Walls ; R.G. Matson, Households as Economic Organization : A Comparison Between Large Houses on the Northwest Coast and in the Southwest ; G. Coupland, The Evolution of Multi-Family Households on the Northwest Coast of North America ; K. M. Ames, Life in the Big House : Household Labor and Dwelling Size on the Northwest Coast ; B. Hayden, G. A. Reinhardt, D. Holmberg, D. Crellin, Space Per Capita and the Optimal Size of Housepits ; E.B. Banning, Houses, Compounds and Mansions in the Prehistoric Near East.
Référence : 15277.
Anglais
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