Intro; Foreword; Albert Hafner; Part One; Mobility and pottery production, what for? Introductory remarks; Caroline Heitz & Regine Stapfer; Prehistoric archaeology, anthropology and material culture studies; Albert Hafner; Material culture and mobility: A brief history of archaeological thought; Astrid Van Oyen; Part two; The Munzingen culture in the southern Upper Rhine Plain (3950-3600Â BC); LoÃc̄ Jammet-Reynal; From typo-chronology to inter- and intra-site variety; Ute Seidel; Social dynamics and mobility: Discussing â#x80;#x98;householdsâ#x80;#x99; in Linear Pottery Culture research (6 MLÂ BC).
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Isabel HohleSpecial pottery in â#x80;#x98;Cortaillodâ#x80;#x99; settlements of Neolithic western Switzerland (3900-3500Â BC); Regine Stapfer; Cultural and chronological attribution of pottery on the move; Eda Gross; Part three; Movement in making: â#x80;#x98;Women working with clayâ#x80;#x99; in northern CÃt́e dâ#x80;#x99;Ivoire; Iris KÃœhler; Form follows fingers; Nadja Melko; Practice, social cohesion and identity in pottery production in the Balearic Islands (1500-500Â BC); Daniel Albero Santacreu; Making things, being mobile: Pottery as intertwined histories of humans and materials; Caroline Heitz.
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Pots on the move become different: Emplacement and mobility of pottery, specific properties of pots and their contexts of useHans Peter Hahn; Afterword: the pot and the archaeologist â#x80;#x93; changing each other in an (un)happy marriage?; Philipp W. Stockhammer; Blank Page; Blank Page.
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SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
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For many past and present societies, pottery forms an integral part of material culture and everyday practice. This makes it a promising case example to address human-thing-relations on a more general level, as well as social life itself. Humans organise their lives not only by engaging with materials and things but also by oscillating between movement and stasis. In these various rhythms of mobility - from daily subsistence-based movements to long-term migrations - things like ceramic vessels are crafted, but also act as consumer goods. From their production until their deposition as waste, g.
OTHER EDITION IN ANOTHER MEDIUM
Title
Mobility and Pottery Production : Archaeological and Anthropological Perspectives.