ngatatjara044.tif (86254 bytes) Ethnoarchaeology and Ethnology Series


The Agta Foragers:
Ethnoarchaeology and Ethnography

The Agta of the Phillippines live by hunting, gathering, fishing and exchange with lowland farmers. Based on studies of a group whose traditional lifeways are partly maintained, this set looks at the interactions of subsistence and settlement systems seasonally as well as how archaeological components of a living system are formed. By P. Bion Griffin.
80 slides -- $65 -- Available on CD-Rom

The Ngatatjara Aborigines of Western Australia
The emphasis in this set is on a broad range of the domestic activities of a traditional hunter-gatherer society living in an extremely ecologically stressed environment. The material culture of the domestic activities of these people is carefully documented in this set, thus addressing some relevant archaeological issues. By Richard A. Gould.
80 slides -- $65 -- Available on CD-Rom

Material Culture of the Ngatatjara  
This set complements the previous set in showing how continuity and change  in the technology and material culture of Western Australian aborigines has been increasingly influenced by contact with the developed world. The ingenuity of traditional multi-purpose tools such as the spearthrower is illustrated in both their purely practical daily use and in their symbolic, communicative function. By Richard A. Gould.
56 slides -- $59
Ethnoarchaeology of the Kalinga
This set emphasizes both the technology of pottery making and the subtle ways in which potter variation reflects the social organization and behavior of a living community, that of the Kalinga of the Philippines. Since the focus is on pottery, it has a direct bearing upon both method and theory for the archaeologist, ethnologist and the art historian. By William A. Longacre.
80 slides -- $65 -- Available on CD-Rom
View thumbnails of all the images in this set.
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Pottery Among the Highland People of Western China
Using traditional methods, thoroughly documented here, the Dai and Wa potters of a rural area bordering Thailand and Burma (Myanmar) are shown making a variety of vessels for cooking, for water storage, and for ritual use. This set has relevance for art history and fine arts students, as well as anthropologists and archaeologists. By William A. Longacre and Yungti Li.
65 slides -- $54 -- Available on CD-Rom
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Indian Images in Commerce
Images of imaginary Indians have been used in American and European media for years. The various guises of Indians reflect various themes in American life--Respectable (or Rousseau) Indian, the Laughable Indian, the Threatening Indian, the Benevolent (or Thanksgiving) Indian, and the Enigmatic Indian. This set illustrates some American views of ethnic minorities; as such it has relevance not only for anthropology, but also for marketing, American history, and American Studies. By Gregory A. Reinhardt.
80 slides -- $60 -- Available on CD-Rom
View thumbnails of all the images in this set.
new.gif (500 bytes) Black Collectibles: Physical Representations of Stereotypes
Mass produced in the U.S. and abroad from the 1880's to the late 1950's, cookie jars, salt shakers, post cards, tourists souvenirs and many other items portraying black people were almost universally derogatory. Users grew to accept the cruelly exaggerated, servile roles depicted in these items and in the media. By Dr. Kenneth W.Goings.
80 slides -- $60 -- Available on CD-Rom
View thumbnails of all the images in this set.

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