Practicing Materiality
232 pages, 6 x 9
11 halftones, 11 line drawings, 1 chart, 2 tables
Paperback
Release Date:12 Nov 2015
ISBN:9780816531271
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Practicing Materiality

The University of Arizona Press
It is little wonder that relationships between things and humans are front-and-center in the contemporary social sciences, given the presence of technologies in every conceivable aspect of our lives. From Bruno Latour to Ian Hodder, anthropologists and archaeologists are embracing “thing theory” and the “ontological turn.” In Practicing Materiality, Ruth M. Van Dyke cautions that as anthropologists turn toward animals and things, they run the risk of turning away from people and intentional actions.          

Practicing Materiality focuses on the practical job of applying materiality to anthropological investigations, but with the firm retention of anthropocentrism. The philosophical discussions that run through the nine chapters develop practical applications for material studies, including Heideggerian phenomenology, Gellian secondary agency, object life histories, and bundling. Seven case studies are flanked by an introduction and a discussion chapter. The case studies represent a wide range of archaeological and anthropological contexts, from contemporary New York City and Turkey to fifteenth-century Portugal, the ancient southwest United States, and the ancient Andes. Authors in every chapter argue for the rejection of subject/object dualism, regarding material things as actively involved in the negotiation of power within human social relationships. Practicing Materiality demonstrates that it is possible to focus on the entangled lives of things without losing sight of their political and social implications.
Among the greatest strengths of the book is the incorporation of archaeological and sociocultural case studies, [which help] to break down the artificial barriers that often divide anthropological research. I expect this book to provide an excellent primer for students and professional anthropologists who wish to employ materiality in their research but are looking for methods and approaches that will facilitate its adoption.’—Lars Fogelin, editor of Religion, Archaeology, and the Material World

‘This volume is a timely and much-needed addition to the materiality literature because of its insistence that politics and object agency are intimately entangled. As the editor notes, it is an unabashedly anthropocentric engagement with materiality theory. That is to say, it views materiality as an integral quality of human life, rather than something independent of it.’—Robert W. Preucel, author of Archaeological Semiotics
Ruth M. Van Dyke is a professor of anthropology at Binghamton University, where she researches archaeology of the indigenous southwest United States, power, ideology, social memory, phenomenology, and materiality, as well as landscape, architecture, place, and space. She is the author of­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­ The Chaco Experience: Landscape and Ideology at the Center Place.
1. Materiality in Practice: An Introduction
Ruth M. Van Dyke
2. Talk to It: Memory and Material Agency in the Arab Alawite (Nusayri) Community
Sule Can
3. Replicating Things, Replicating Identity: The Movement of Chacoan Ritual Paraphernalia Beyond the Chaco World
Erina Gruner
4. Animacy of the Everyday: Materiality, Bundling, and the Production of Quotidian Ceramics
Tanya Chiykowski
5. An Empire of Clay: Ceramics and Discipline in the Early Modern Portuguese Empire
Rui Gomes Coelho
6. Quotidian Agency and Imperial Agendas: A Study of Andean Middle Horizon Huamanga Ceramics
Brittany Fullen
7. The Work They Do: Phenomenology and Monumentality in the Late Archaic of Peru
Halona Young-Wolfe
8. From Banned Bodies to Political Subjects: Immigrants in Protest Bundles
Jessica Santos López
9. Materiality as Problem Space
Mark W. Hauser
Contributors
Index
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