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Ceramic perspectives on ancient Egyptian society
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ISBN: 9781108744133 9781108881487 Year: 2021 Publisher: Cambridge Cambridge University Press

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Book
Ceramic perspectives on ancient Egyptian society
Author:
ISBN: 1108881483 1108895573 1108898211 1108744133 9781108881487 Year: 2021 Publisher: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press,

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This Element demonstrates how ceramics, a dataset that is more typically identified with chronology than social analysis, can forward the study of Egyptian society writ large. This Element argues that the sheer mass of ceramic material indicates the importance of pottery to Egyptian life. Ceramics form a crucial dataset with which Egyptology must critically engage, and which necessitate working with the Egyptian past using a more fluid theoretical toolkit. This Element will demonstrate how ceramics may be employed in social analyses through a focus on four broad areas of inquiry: regionalism; ties between province and state, elite and non-elite; domestic life; and the relationship of political change to social change. While the case studies largely come from the Old through Middle Kingdoms, the methods and questions may be applied to any period of Egyptian history.


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Ceramic perspectives on ancient Egyptian society
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ISBN: 9781108881487 Year: 2021 Publisher: Cambridge Cambridge University Press

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Book
Pottery and economy in Old Kingdom Egypt
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ISBN: 9004259856 9789004259850 9789004259843 9004259848 1306028094 Year: 2014 Publisher: Leiden Boston

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In Pottery and Economy in Old Kingdom Egypt , Leslie Anne Warden investigates the economic importance of utilitarian ceramics, particularly beer jars and bread moulds, in third millennium BC Egypt. The Egyptian economy at this period is frequently presented as state-centric or state-defined. This study forwards new methodology for a bottom-up approach to Egyptian economy, analyzing economic relationships through careful analysis of variation within the utilitarian wares which formed the basis of much economic exchange in the period. Beer jars and bread moulds, together with their archaeological, textual, and iconographic contexts, thus yield a framework for the economy which is fluid, agent-based, and defined by small scale, face-to-face relationships rather than the state.

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