Syllabus ARK2130/4130 spring 2019
Literature marked (*) will be available in compendiums, for sale in kopiutsalget. The other publications can be bought in Akademika bookstore, are available in the University Library (UB og Sophus Bugge), or are available on internet (see links).
Technology and the social
(€) Dobres, M.-A. And Hoffman, C.R. 1994. Social Agency and the Dynamics of Prehistoric Technology. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 1 (3): 211-258 (49 pages)
* Gell, A. 1992. ¡°The technology of enchantment and the enchantment of technology¡±. In Cooter, J & Shelton, A. (eds.). Anthropology, Art and Aesthetics, 40-63. Clarendon Press, Oxford (24 pages)
* Olsen, B. 2010. Chapter 2. ¡°Brothers in Arms? Archaeology and Material Culture Studies¡±. In Olsen, B. In Defense of Things. Archaeology and the Ontology of Objects, 21-38. AltaMira Press, New York (18 pages)
(€) Pfaffenberger, B. 1992. Social Anthropology of Technology. Annual Review of Anthropology 21: 491-516 (25 pages)
(€) Pedersen, Unn. ¡°Urban craftspeople in Viking-age Kaupang¡± In Gitte Hansen, Steven Ashby and Irene Baug (eds.): Everyday Products in the Middle Ages: Crafts, Consumption and the Individual in Northern Europe c. AD 800-1600, pp. 51-68. Oxbow, 2015. (17 pages)
Gosden, Chris and Yvonne Marshall 1999. The Cultural Biography of Objects. World Archaeology, vol. 31, no. 2: 169-178 (9 pages).
Hollenback, Kacy L. and Michail Brian Schiffer 2010. ¡°Technology and Material Life¡±. In Dan Hicks and Mary Beaudry (eds.): The Oxford Handbook of Material Culture Studies. Oxford University Press, Oxford (21 pages).
Roux, Valentine 2016. ¡°Ceramic Manufacture: The Approach¡±. In Alice Hunt (ed.): The Oxford Handbook of Archaeological Ceramic Analysis. Oxford University Press, Oxford (16 pages).
Non-ferrous metalwork
* Anfinset, N. 2000. ¡°Copper Technology in Contemporary Western Nepal. A Discussion of its Form, Function and Context¡±. In Olausen, D. & Vandkilde, H. (eds.). Form, Function and Context. Material Culture Studies in Scandinavian Archaeology, 203-212. Acta Archaeologica Lundensia 31. Almquist & Wiksell, Lund (10 pages)
* Armbruster, B. 2004: ¡°Goldsmiths' Tools at Hedeby¡±. In Hines, J.; Lane, A. & Redknap, M. (eds.): Land, Sea and Home. The Society for medieval Archaeology Monograph, vol. 20, s. 109¨C123. Maney, Leeds (15 pages)
* Fitzpatrick, A. 2009. ¡°In his hands and in his head: The Amesbury Archer as a metalworker¡±. In Clark, P. (ed.). Bronze Age Connections. Cultural Contact in Prehistoric Europe, 176-188. Oxbow Books, Oxford (13 pages)
* Fuglesang, S.H. 1987: "The Personal Touch. On the identification of workshops¡±. I: James E. Knirk (red.): Proceedings of the Tenth Viking Congress. Larkollen, Norway, 1985. Universitetets Oldsaksamlings skrifter. Ny rekke 9, 219¨C230. Universitetets Oldsaksamling, Oslo (12 pages)
(€) Hauptmann, A. 2007. Chapter 2. Problems and Methods of Archaeometallurgy. In Hauptmann, A. The Archaeometallurgy of Copper. Evidence from Faynan, Jordan, 7-38. Springer, Berlin & Heidelberg (32 pages)
(€)Hedegaard, K.R. 2005: Casting Trefoil Brooches. Viking Heritage Magazine, 2005:1:8¨C13 (6 pages) (Finnes i Canvas)
* Horne, L. 1995: ¡°Itinerant Brasscasters of Eastern India¡±. In: Allchin, B. (ed.), Living Traditions. Studies in Ethnoarchaeology of South Asia: 265-280. Oxbow & IBH Publ. Co. Pvt. Ltd. Oxford/New Dehli (16 pages)
* Kristoffersen, S. 2000. ¡°Expressive objects¡±. In Olausen, D. & Vandkilde, H. (eds.). Form, Function and Context. Material Culture Studies in Scandinavian Archaeology, 265-274. Acta Archaeologica Lundensia 31. Almquist & Wiksell, Lund (12 pages)
(€) Lund, J. & Melheim, A.L. 2011. ?Heads and tails ¨C minds and bodies. Reconsidering the Late Bronze Age Vestby hoard in light of symbolist and body perspectives¡±. European Journal of Archaeology 15 (24 pages)
(€) Melheim, L., Prescott C., & Anfinset, N. 2016: Bronze casting and cultural connections: Bronze Age workshops at Hunn, Norway. Praehistorische Zeitschrift; 2016; 91 (1): 42¨C67.
(€) Nielsen, S. et al. 2005. The Gundestrup Cauldron. New Scientific and Technical Investigations. Acta Archaeologica 76: 1-58 (58 pages)
* Ottaway, B.S. & Roberts, B. 2008. ¡°The Emergence of Metalworking¡±. In Jones, A. (ed.). Prehistoric Europe. Theory and Practice, 193-225. Blackwell, Oxford (33 pages)
* R?nne, P. 1989: ¡°Early Bronze Age Spiral Ornament - the Technical Background¡±. Journal of Danish Archaeology 8: 126-143 (18 pages)
(€) S?derberg, A. & Gustafsson, N.B. 2006: A Viking Period silver workshop in Fr?jel, Gotland. Fornv?nnen: 101: 29¨C31 (3 pages)
In the quarry
* Barber, M. 2003. Chapter 4. ¡°The Work of Time: People, Processes and Places¡±. In Barber, M. Bronze and the Bronze Age. Metalwork and Society in Britain c 2500 ¨C 800 BC, 109-134. Tempus Publishing, Stroud (26 pages)
* Engedal, ?. 2010. Chapter 7: ? Transformation ? (sub-chapters 7.1-7.3). In Engedal, ?. The Bronze Age of Northwestern Scandinavia, 142-162. Dissertation Dr. Philos, University of Bergen (20 pages)
* Shennan, S. 1998. ¡°Producing copper in the eastern Alps during the second millennium BC¡±. In Knapp, A.B., Piggott, V.C. & Herbert, E.W. (eds.). Social Approaches to an Industrial Past. The Archaeology and Anthropology of Mining, 191-204. Routledge, London & New York (14 pages)
* Timberlake, S. 2009. ¡°Copper mining and metal production at the beginning of the British Bronze Age¡±. In Clark, P. (ed.). Bronze Age Connections. Cultural Contact in Prehistoric Europe, 94-121. Oxbow Books, Oxford (28 pages)
* Tylecote, R. F. 1992: Chapter 2: ¡°The technique and development of early copper smelting¡± & Chapter 3: ¡°The early Bronze Age¡±. In Tylecote, R.F. A history of metallurgy (2nd ed.), 7-17 & 18-34. Institute of Materials, London (28 pages)
Making iron
(€) Haaland, R. 2004. Technology, Transformation and Symbolism. Ethnographic Perspectives on European Iron Working Norwegian Archaeological Review 37 (1): 2-19 (18 pages)
(€) Larsen, J.H. & Rundberget, B. 2009. ¡°Raw material, iron extraction and settlement in Southeastern Norway¡±, 200 BC ¨C AD 1150, 38-50. Vitark ¨C Acta Archaeologica Nidronsiensia 7, Trondheim (13 pages)
* N?rbach, L. C. 1999. Organising iron production and settlement in Northwestern Europe during the Iron Age. In Fabech, C. & Ringtved, J. (eds.), Settlement and Landscape, 237-247 (10 pages).
In the smithy
(A) Arwidsson, G. & Berg, G. 1983. The M?stermyr Find. A Viking Age Tool Chest from Gotland. Stockholm: Almquist & Wiksell International, 3-54 (51 pages)
(€) Gansum, T. 2004. Role the Bones ¨C From Iron to Steel. Norwegian Archaeological Review 37 (1): 41-57 (17 pages)
(€) Jouttij?rvi, Arne 2009.The Shadow in the Smithy. Materials and Manufacturing Processes 24:9 ,975¡ª980. (5 pages)
(€) Martens, Irmelin 2004. Indigenous and imported Viking Age weapons in Norway ¨C a problem with European implications. Journal of Nordic Archaeological Science 14, s. 125¨C137. (12 pages)
Pottery
(€) Arnold, D.E. 2000. Does the Standardization of Ceramic Pastes Really Mean Specialization?. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 7 (4): 333-375 (43 pages)
(€) Fredriksen, P.D., Kristoffersen E.S. og Zimmermann, U. 2014. Innovation and Collapse: Bucket-shaped Pottery and Metalwork in the Terminal Migration Period. Norwegian Archaeological Review 47 (2): 119-141. (22 pages)
(€) Gosselain, O. 2000. Materializing Identities: An African Perspective. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 7 (3): 187-217 (31 pages)
(€) Hulth¨¦n, B. 2006. Helg?: Moulds and Routes. Ceramological Investigations of Distribution, Ceramics Craft and Raw Materials. Monographs on Ceramics 3. Laboratory of Ceramics Research, Dept. of Quaternary Geology, Institute of Geology, Lund University (50 pages)
* Kleppe, E.J. & Simonsen, S.E. Bucket-Shaped Pots ¨C A West-Norwegian Ceramic Form. Experiments with Production Methods. AmS-Skrifter 10. Arkeologisk museum i Stavanger (40 pages)
* Sinopoli, C.M. 1991. Chapter 2. ¡°Defining Ceramics¡±. In Sinopoli, C.M. Approaches to Archaeological Ceramics, 9-42. Plenum Press, London & New York (34 pages)
(€) Sofaer, J. 2006. Pots, Houses and Metal: Technological Relations at the Bronze Age Tell at Sz¨¢zhalombatta, Hungary. Oxford Journal of Archaeology 25 (2): 127-147 (21 pages)