Towards an archaeology of pedagogy: learning, teaching and the generation of material culture traditions
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] D. Stout. Skill and Cognition in Stone Tool Production , 2002, Current Anthropology.
[2] P. Richerson,et al. Not by genes alone: How culture transformed human evolution. , 2004 .
[3] Kjel Knutsson,et al. Skilled production and social reproduction : Aspects of Traditional Stone-Too technologies , 2006 .
[4] K. Sterelny. Genes, Memes and Human History , 2004 .
[5] P. Crown,et al. Learning to Make Pottery in the Prehispanic American Southwest , 2001, Journal of Anthropological Research.
[6] P. Greenfield,et al. History, Culture, Learning, and Development , 2000 .
[7] Patrick V. Kirch,et al. Hawaiki, Ancestral Polynesia: An Essay in Historical Anthropology , 2001 .
[8] J. Pelegrin,et al. Prehistoric Lithic Technology : Some Aspects of Research , 1990 .
[9] K. MacDonald. Cross-cultural Comparison of Learning in Human Hunting , 2007, Human nature.
[10] Michael William Coy,et al. Apprenticeship : from theory to method and back again , 1991 .
[11] Dietrich Stout,et al. The social and cultural context of stone knapping skill acquisition , 2005 .
[12] Laureano Castro,et al. The evolution of culture: from primate social learning to human culture. , 2004, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[13] D. Breternitz. Society for American Archaeology , 1965, American Antiquity.
[14] Brian Hayden,et al. Interaction inferences in archaeology and learning frameworks of the maya , 1984 .
[15] Shannon P McPherron,et al. Stone knapping: the necessary conditions for a uniquely hominin behaviour , 2007 .
[16] Etienne Wenger,et al. Situated Learning: Legitimate Peripheral Participation , 1991 .
[17] Martin H. Levinson. Not by Genes Alone: How Culture Transformed Human Evolution , 2006 .
[18] Carl P. Lipo,et al. Science, style and the study of community structure : an example from the Central Mississippi River Valley , 2000 .
[19] B. Schneuwly. Cultural learning is cultural. [A commentary on Tomasello, Krugner and Ratner's "Cultural learning" Peer commentary by B. Schneuwly] , 1993 .
[20] K. Ruddle,et al. Education for traditional food procurement in the Orinoco delta , 1977 .
[21] D. Macdonald,et al. Subsistence, Sex, and Cultural Transmission in Folsom Culture , 1998 .
[22] Carl P. Lipo,et al. Mapping our ancestors : phylogenetic approaches in anthropology and prehistory , 2006 .
[23] T. Caro,et al. Is There Teaching in Nonhuman Animals? , 1992, The Quarterly Review of Biology.
[24] F Riede. Maglemosian Memes: Technological Ontology, Craft Traditions and the Evolution of Northern European Barbed Points , 2008 .
[25] S. Shennan,et al. Processes of culture change in prehistory: a case study from the European Neolithic , 2000 .
[26] Felix Riede,et al. Chaîne Opératoire, Chaîne Evolutionaire? Putting technological sequences into an evolutionary perspective , 2006 .
[27] M. Erpino. Evolution teaching. , 1996, Science.
[28] F. Berkes,et al. Transmission of Indigenous Knowledge and Bush Skills Among the Western James Bay Cree Women of Subarctic Canada , 1997 .
[29] Mark Collard,et al. Seven. The Evolution of Material Culture Diversity among Iranian Tribal Populations , 2009 .
[30] Stephen J. Lycett,et al. On questions surrounding the Acheulean ‘tradition’ , 2008 .
[31] Mark H. Johnson,et al. Processes of change in brain and cognitive development , 2005, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.
[32] M. Collard,et al. Investigating cultural evolution through biological phylogenetic analyses of Turkmen textiles , 2002 .
[33] Anders Högberg,et al. Playing with Flint: Tracing a Child’s Imitation of Adult Work in a Lithic Assemblage , 2008 .
[34] Kjel Knutsson,et al. Skilled production and social reproduction , 2006 .
[35] S. Mithen. Ecological Interpretations of Palaeolithic Art , 1991, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society.
[36] Dan Sperber,et al. The cognitive foundations of cultural stability and diversity , 2004, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.
[37] A. Whiten,et al. Imitation of hierarchical action structure by young children. , 2006, Developmental science.
[38] L. Johansen,et al. Two 'Epi-Ahrensburgian' sites in the northem Netherlands: Oudehaske (Friesland) and Gramsbergen (Overijssel) , 2000 .
[39] A. Högberg. Child and Adult at a Knapping Area. A technological Flake Analysis of the Manufacture of a Neolithic Square Sectioned Axe and a Child’s Flint knapping Activities on an Assemblage excavated as Part of the Öresund Fixed Link Project. , 1999 .
[40] Andrew Whiten,et al. The second inheritance system of chimpanzees and humans , 2005, Nature.
[41] D. Stapert. Youngsters knapping flint near the campfire : An alternative view of site k at Maastricht-Belvédère (the Netherlands) , 2007 .
[42] P. Bodu. Les Chasseurs Magdaleniens De Pincevent; Quelques Aspects De Leurs Comportements. , 1996 .
[43] M. J. O’Brien,et al. Mapping our Ancestors: Phylogenetic Methods in Anthropology and Prehistory , 2006 .
[44] Jan Apel,et al. Knowledge, Know-how and Raw Material - The Production of Late Neolithic Flint Daggers in Scandinavia , 2008 .
[45] Carl P. Lipo,et al. Cultural transmission, copying errors, and the generation of variation in material culture and the archaeological record , 2005 .
[46] Mark Collard,et al. On the relationship between interindividual cultural transmission and population-level cultural diversity: a case study of weaving in Iranian tribal populations , 2009 .
[47] Stephen C. Want,et al. How do children ape? Applying concepts from the study of non-human primates to the developmental study of 'imitation' in children , 2002 .
[48] O. Soffer,et al. Perceived landscapes and built environments. The cultural geography of Late Paleolithic Eurasia , 2003 .
[49] G. Csibra,et al. Social learning and social cognition: The case for pedagogy , 2006 .
[50] S. Milne. Palaeo-Eskimo Novice Flintknapping in the Eastern Canadian Arctic , 2005 .
[51] Nyree Finlay,et al. Introduction: Archaeological Approaches to Lithic Production Skill and Craft Learning , 2008 .
[52] N. Pigeot,et al. Technical and Social Actors. Flintknapping Specialists and Apprentices at Magdalenian Etiolles , 1990 .
[53] Robert L. Bettinger,et al. Point Typologies, Cultural Transmission, and the Spread of Bow-and-Arrow Technology in the Prehistoric Great Basin , 1999, American Antiquity.
[54] M. Collard,et al. Investigating the peopling of North America through cladistic analyses of Early Paleoindian projectile points , 2007 .
[55] G. Clark,et al. Art as information: Explaining Upper Palaeolithic art in western Europe , 1994 .
[56] Michael J. O'Brien,et al. Cladistics and archaeology , 2003 .
[57] P. Pétrequin,et al. La poterie en Nouvelle-Guinée : savoir-faire et transmission des techniques , 1999 .
[58] Carl P. Lipo,et al. Cultural Transmission Theory and the Archaeological Record: Providing Context to Understanding Variation and Temporal Changes in Material Culture , 2007 .
[59] Stephen Shennan,et al. Cultural learning in hominids: a behavioural ecological approach , 1999 .