Matter, Materiality and Modern Culture offers a new approach to the study of contemporary objects, to give the reader a new understanding of the relationship between people and their material world. It asks how the very stuff of our world has shaped our societies by addressing a broad array of questions including: * why do Berliners have such strange door keys? * should the Isle of Wight pop festival be preserved? * could aliens tell a snail shell from a waste paper basket * why did Victorian England make so much of death and burial?
Introduction; PAUL GRAVES-BROWN; Background; Embodiment; Mutuality; Functionality and power; Indigenous theory and illusion; 1 The Berlin key or how to do words with things, BRUNO LATOUR; 2 The functions of things: a philosophical perspective on material culture, BETH PRESTON; Introduction; Two philosophical conceptions of function; Function in material culture; Implications for archaeology; Conclusion; 3 Making culture and weaving the world, TIM INGOLD; Artefacts and organisms; Making and growing; On encountering a basket; Surface, force and the generation of form; Spirals in nature and art; The limits of design; On the growth of artefacts; Baskets and textiles; Making as a way of weaving; Weaving by birds and humans; Conclusion; 4 Indigenous theories, scientific theories and product histories, MICHAEL BRIAN SCHIFFER; Introduction; Indigenous theories and the demise of the early electric car; Indigenous theory: the dark side; Behavioural theories and scientific product histories; Discussion and conclusion; 5 Taking things more seriously: psychological theories of autism and the material-social divide, EMMA WILLIAMS AND ALAN COSTALL; The social context of object use; How children with autism relate to objects; Current theoretical models of autism and the material-social divide; The material-social divide; 'Socialising' affordances; Conclusion; 6 Pomp and circumstance: archaeology, modernity and the corporatisation of death: early social and political Victorian attitudes towards burial practice, GEORGE NASH; Introduction: the growth of secularised society; Good mourning: respectability of death; Time for change; Health and social security; Ascending Highgate Hill; Termination at the London Necropolis Company Terminus; To summarise; 7 Never mind the relevance? popular culture for archaeologists, A.J. SCHOFIELD; Snapshots; Introducing popular culture; Heritage and anti-heritage: definitions, contradictions; Exploring youth culture: 1962-75; Conclusion; 8 Always crashing in the same car, PAUL GRAVES-BROWN; Habitat or skin?; The secret life of things; Symbolic wounds; Pornography; Risk and control; In conclusion: who, or what, is to blame?; Index;
Biography
P.M. Graves-Brown studied Archaeology and Prehistory at Sheffield University and gained his PhD in archaeology at Southampton University. He currently works as an archaeological curator in South Wales. He has published a wider variety of work, mainly on human origins and modern material culture.
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