|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
Exploring Ireland’s Viking-Age Towns explores the emergence of
towns, urban lifestyles and urban identities in Ireland coinciding
with the arrival of the Vikings and the appearance of the
post-and-wattle Type 1 house. These houses reflect this crucial
transition to urban living with its attendant changes for
individuals, households, and society. Exploring Ireland’s
Viking-Age Towns uses household archaeology as a lens to explore
the materiality, variability and day-to-day experiences of living
in these houses. It moves from the intimate scale of individual
households to the larger scale of Ireland’s earliest urban
communities. For the first time, this book considers how these
houses were more than just buildings: they were homes, important
places where people lived, worked and died. These new towns were
busy places, with a multitude of people, ideas and things. This
book uses the mass of archaeological data to undertake comparative
analyses of houses and properties, artefact distribution patterns
and access analysis studies to interrogate some 500 Viking-Age
urban houses. This analysis is structured in three parts, an
investigation of the houses, the households and the town. Exploring
Ireland’s Viking-Age Towns discusses how these new urban
households managed their homes to create a sense of place and
belonging in these new environments and allow themselves to develop
a new, urban identity. This book is suited to advanced students and
specialists of the Viking Age in Ireland but archaeologists and
historians of the early medieval and Viking worlds will find much
of interest here. It will also appeal to readers with interests in
the archaeology of house and home, households, identities and urban
studies.
Using an interdisciplinary and transhistorical framework this book
examines the cultural, material, and symbolic articulations of
Irish migration relationships from the medieval period through to
the contemporary post-Celtic Tiger era. With attention to people's
different uses of social space, relationships with and memories of
the landscape, as well as their symbolic expressions of diasporic
identity, Heritage, Diaspora and the Consumption of Culture
examines the different forms of diaspora over time and contributes
to contemporary debates on home, foreignness, globalization and
consumption. By examining various movements of people into and out
of Ireland, the book explores how expressions of cultural capital
and symbolic power have changed over time in the Irish collective
imagination, shedding light on the ways in which Ireland is
represented and Irish culture consumed and materialized overseas.
Arranged around the themes of home and location, identity and
material culture, and global culture and consumption, this
collection brings together the work of scholars from the UK,
Ireland, Europe, the US and Canada, to explore the ways in which
the processes of movement affect the people's negotiation and
contestation of concepts of identity, the local and the global. As
such, it will appeal to scholars working in fields such as
sociology, politics, cultural studies, history and archaeology,
with interests in migration, gender studies, diasporic identities,
heritage and material culture.
|
|