The importance of British material culture to historical archaeologies of the nineteenth century /
"Case studies of the importance and meaning of mass-produced material culture in Britain during the Industrial Revolution"--
Saved in:
Other Authors: | |
---|---|
Format: | Electronic eBook |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Lincoln :
University of Nebraska Press,
2016.
|
Series: | Society for historical archaeology series in material culture
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | CONNECT CONNECT CONNECT |
Table of Contents:
- Introduction: The Importance of British Material Culture to Historical Archaeologies of the Nineteenth Century / Alasdair Brooks
- 1. At the Center of the Web : Later Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century Ceramics from Huntingdon Town Centre in an International Context / Alasdair Brooks, Aileen Connor, and Rachel Clarke
- 2. Containers and Teapots : Archaeological Evidence for the Exported Wares of the Caledonian Pottery, Rutherglen, and Its Role in Glasgow's Ceramic International Trade and Industry / Chris Jarrett, Morag Cross, and Alistair Robertson
- 3. "A Trifling Matter?" : State Branding on Stoneware Bottles, 1812-1834 / Jennifer Basford
- 4. Uncovering and Recovering Cleared Galloway : The Role of Documents in Rural Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century Lowland Scotland / C. Broughton Anderson
- 5. The Fall of Big Hair : Hair Curlers as Evidence of Changing Fashions / Carolyn L. White
- 6. Food as Material Culture in a Nineteenth-Century Ecclesiastical Community, Worcester, England / Richard Thomas
- 7. "Perfection and Economy" : Continuity and Change in Elite Dining Practices, ca. 1780-1880 / Annie Gray
- 8. Material Culture in Miniature : The Historical Archaeology of Nineteenth-Century Miniature Objects / Ralph Mills
- 9. Artifacts of Mortuary Practice : Industrialization, Choice, and the Individual / Harold Mytum
- "Home"-Made : Exploring the Quality of British Domestic Goods in Nineteenth-Century Urban Assemblages / Penny Crook
- 11. Shadows after Sunset : Imperial Materiality and the Empire's Lost Things / James Symonds.