Archaeology, Museum & Heritage...

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ROUTLEDGE Archaeology, Museum & Heritage Studies 2018 New and Forthcoming Titles www.routledge.com/archaeology

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R O U T L E D G E

Archaeology, Museum& Heritage Studies 2018

New and Forthcoming Titles

www.routledge.com/archaeology

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WelcomeWelcome to the 2018 Archaeology, Museum & Heritage Studies Catalogue.

In this catalogue you will find information on the Routledge list which covers Introductory Archaeology, Archaeological Theory, Archaeology by Period or Region,Museum Studies, Heritage Studies, and Conservation.

We welcome your feedback on our publishing programme, so please do nothesitate to get in touch – whether you want to read, write, review, adapt or buy, we want to hear from you, so please visit our website below or please contact your local sales representative for more information.

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ContentsARCHAEOLOGY ................................................................................................................................................................... 2Introductory Archaeology .................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................... 2Archaeology by Period or Region ................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................... 3Archaeological Theory ............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................ 8Archaeology (Others) .............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................. 9

MUSEUM & HERITAGE STUDIES .................................................................................................................................... 11

Index ................................................................................................................................................................................... 20

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15th Edition • TEXTBOOK • NEW EDITION5th Edition • TEXTBOOK • NEW EDITIONPeople of the EarthArchaeologyAn Introduction to World PrehistoryThe Science of the Human PastDr. Brian Fagan, University of California, USA and Nadia DurraniMark Q SuttonPeople of the Earth is a narrative account of the prehistory of humankind from our originsover 3 million years ago to the first pre-industrial civilizations, beginning about 5,000 years

Archaeology conveys the excitement of archaeological discovery and explains howarchaeologists think as they scientifically find, analyze, and interpret evidence. This text

ago. It is unique in its even balance of the human past, in its readily accessible style, andintroduces the broad and fascinating world of archaeology from the scientific perspective.in its flowing narrative that carries the reader through the long sweep of our past. BoxesDiscussions on the theoretical aspects of archaeology, as well as the practical applicationsand sidebars describe key dating methods and important archaeological sites. This classicof what is learned about the past, have been updated and expanded upon in this fifth

edition. world prehistory sets the standard for books on the subject and is the most widely usedprehistory textbook in the world.Upon completing this book, readers will be able to:RoutledgeDiscuss the theoretical aspects of archaeology. Apply what has been learned about the

past. Identify the various perspectives archaeologists have. Market: ArchaeologyMarch 2018: 229 x 152: 672pp

RoutledgeMarket: ArchaeologyApril 2018: 254 x 203: 334ppHb: 978-1-138-10592-8: £200.00

Hb: 978-1-138-72299-6: £180.00Pb: 978-1-138-72296-5: £135.00eBook: 978-1-315-19329-8* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138722996

Pb: 978-1-138-09347-8: £110.00eBook: 978-1-315-10680-9* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138105928

Dummy text to keep placeholderTEXTBOOK • READERThe Archaeology of ArtArchaeology of Pacific OceaniaMaterials, Practices, AffectsInhabiting a Sea of IslandsAndrew Cochrane and Andrew Meirion JonesMike CarsonSeries: Themes in Archaeology SeriesSeries: Routledge World ArchaeologyThe Archaeology of Art introduces students to the analysis of visual expression in thearchaeological record and charts a fresh prospectus for the study of archaeological art. The

This book integrates a region-wide chronological narrative of the archaeology of PacificOceania. How and why did this vast sea of islands, covering nearly one-third of the world’s

topic intercuts almost all areas of archaeological enquiry but is often divided up intosurface, come to be inhabited over the last several millennia, transcending significantdisciplinary sub-fields which rarely engage with one another. One of the key argumentschange in ecology, demography, and society? What can any or all of the thousands ofof this book is the call for a distinctive ‘archaeology of art’ based upon key archaeologicalinterpretative principles as opposed to those borrowed from anthropology or art history.

islands offer as ideal model systems toward comprehending globally significant issues ofhuman-environment relations and coping with changing circumstances of natural andcultural history? A new synthesis of Pacific Oceanic archaeology addresses these questions,based largely on the author’s investigations throughout the diverse region.

RoutledgeMarket: ArchaeologyMay 2018: 234x156: 250ppRoutledgeHb: 978-1-138-91360-8: £110.00Market: ArchaeologyPb: 978-1-138-91359-2: £29.99March 2018: 246x189: 488ppeBook: 978-1-315-69134-3Hb: 978-1-138-09713-1: £110.00* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138913608Pb: 978-1-138-09717-9: £32.99

* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138097131

TEXTBOOK • READERIron Age LivesThe Archaeology of Britain and Ireland 800 BC – AD 400Ian Armit, University of Bradford, UKSeries: Routledge Archaeology of Northern EuropeIron Age Lives provides the first integrated academic treatment of the Iron Age of Britainand Ireland. After considering the social changes that marked the end of the Later BronzeAge, it examines the environmental, economic, demographic and cultural factors thatunderpinned the emergence of the societies of the Early Iron Age. Subsequent chapterstrace the development of increasingly complex and distinctive social forms. Central themesaddressed in the book include: the creation and expression of individual and collectiveidentities; the social role of art and religion; changing gender roles; technological innovation;the treatments of the dead; gift-giving, trade; and conflict.

RoutledgeMarket: ArchaeologyMay 2018: 246x189: 256ppHb: 978-0-415-53794-0: £85.00Pb: 978-0-415-53795-7: £29.99* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415537940

Browse and order online:www.routledge.com/archaeology

INTRODUCTORY ARCHAEOLOGY2

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Dummy text to keep placeholderTEXTBOOK • READERCádizAncient CreteBenedict Lowe, University of St Andrews, UKThe Archaeology of Minoan SocietySeries: Cities of the Ancient WorldJan DriessenCádiz presents a synthesis of the history of the city from its foundation by the Phoenciansuntil the death of Franco in 1975, building upon recent developments in archaeological

Series: Routledge World ArchaeologyAncient Crete provides an integrated, up-to-date chronological examination of PrehistoricCrete during the extent of the Minoan civilization, incorporating a century of archaeological fieldwork and historical research. Two themes run through the book: the relationship of

Cádiz to Andalucía, and its role as a nexus point between the Iberian Peninsula and thewider world, both the Mediterranean and Atlantic.

discoveries made on the island within a single intellectual and theoretical framework.Driessen argues for a fresh interpretation of Minoan society based on the archaeological

Cádiz is the first full, scholarly treatment of the history of this fascinating city, from its originsas Gadir through to the 20

th century.

material, challenging the traditional top-down approach which situates the palaces asrulers of every aspect of life. With a large number of illustrations, it explores the importantsites and themes of this crucial Bronze Age period in the Prehistoric Aegean. Routledge

Market: Archaeology / Classical Studies / HistoryRoutledgeDecember 2018: 234x156: 232ppOctober 2018: 246x174Hb: 978-1-138-78101-6: £105.00Hb: 978-0-415-82041-7: £90.00* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138781016Pb: 978-0-415-82043-1: £29.99

* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415820417

Dummy text to keep placeholder3rd Edition • TEXTBOOK • NEW EDITIONCarthageAncient EgyptA BiographyAnatomy of a CivilizationDexter Hoyos, University of Sydney, AustraliaBarry Kemp, Emeritus University of Cambridge, UK

This new edition of Kemp's popular text, revised to include thelatest developments in the field, offers a compellingreassessment of what gave ancient Egypt its distinctive andenduring character. With coverage of material culture, socialand economic experiences, and the mindset of its people, it alsoincludes two new chapters exploring the last ten centuries ofancient Egyptian civilization and who, in ethnic terms, theancients were. Fully illustrated, the book draws on ancient writtenmaterials and decades of excavation evidence, transforming ourunderstanding of this remarkable civilization. Broad ranging yet

detailed, Kemp’s work is indispensable for all students of ancient Egypt.

Series: Cities of the Ancient WorldCarthage was founded, tradition claimed, by political exiles from Phoenicia in 813 BC. Shehad two lives, separated by a hundred-year silence. In her first and most famous life shewas one of the Mediterranean’s great seafaring powers, trading and warring on equal termswith Greeks and then with Rome—which in 146 BC chose to destroy her utterly. A secondCarthage, Roman in form, came into being by fiat of Julius Caesar in 44 BC and flourishedfor even longer, before suffering a second destruction in AD 698 at the hands of fresheastern arrivals, the Arabs.

RoutledgeOctober 2018: 234x156: 272ppHb: 978-1-138-78820-6: £105.00* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138788206Routledge

Market: Archaeology / EgyptologyApril 2018: 246x189: 440ppHb: 978-0-415-82725-6: £110.00Pb: 978-0-415-82726-3: £32.99* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415827256

Dummy text to keep placeholderDummy text to keep placeholderCrossing the Human ThresholdArchaeologies of Rock ArtDynamic Transformation and Persistent Places During the MiddlePleistocene

South American PerspectivesEdited by Andrés Troncoso, Felipe Armstrong and GeorgeNashRock art research has seen great development in recent yearsbut notably South American examples have been little studiedwith information, particularly in English, scarce. Exploring thelarge body of rock art in South America, Interpreting Rock Artexploits a rich and varied set of interpretive perspectives,including local approaches, to introduce the reader to the visualrichness of South American rock art.

Routledge

Edited by Matt Pope, UCL, UK, John McNabb and CliveGambleSeries: Frames and Debates in Deep Human HistoryThe volume will provide, for the first time in forty years, a globaloverview of Late Middle Pleistocene archaeology. It investigateswhether this period saw a significant growth in hominincapacities that foreshadow many of the better documenteddevelopments associated with the much later modern humanrevolution. Leading international experts review cave and opensites, drawing on evidence from all parts of the Old World thatwere inhabited during the period, and engage in the debatesabout the evolution of modern human behaviour and challenge

the current conceptual structure.Market: ArchaeologyMarch 2018: 234x156: 256pp

RoutledgeHb: 978-1-138-29267-3: £115.00Market: Archaeology* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138292673November 2017: 234x156: 288ppHb: 978-1-138-21778-2: £105.00eBook: 978-1-315-43932-7* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138217782

Companion WebsiteNew in Paperbacke-InspectionComplimentary Exam Copy

3ARCHAEOLOGY BY PERIOD OR REGION

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Dummy text to keep placeholderDummy text to keep placeholderIconoclasm and Later PrehistoryExtremism, Ancient and Modern

Henry ChapmanIconoclasm and Later Prehistory presents the first analysis oficonoclasm for prehistoric periods. Through an examination ofthe themes of objects, the human body, monuments andlandscapes, the book demonstrates how the application of theapproaches developed within iconoclasm studies can enrichour understanding of earlier periods in addition to identifyingspecific iconoclastic events. By combining approaches from twodistinct disciplinary perspectives, this volume presents a newinterpretative framework for prehistorians and archaeologistsalike.

Routledge

Insurgency, Terror and Empire in the Middle EastSandra Arnold SchamNear Eastern Archaeology is generally represented as a succession of empires with littleattention paid to the individuals, labelled as terrorists at the time, that brought them down.Their stories, when viewed against the backdrop of current violent extremism in the MiddleEast, can provide a unique long term perspective. Seemingly long forgotten pasts arebrought into the narratives of radical groups today more frequently than supposed andExtremism, Ancient and Modern explores this complex relationship of the past and thepresent.

RoutledgeMarket: ArchaeologyFebruary 2018: 234x156: 210ppHb: 978-0-415-78840-3: £110.00Pb: 978-0-415-78839-7: £29.99 Market: ArchaeologyeBook: 978-1-315-22532-6 February 2018: 234x156: 248pp* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415788403 Hb: 978-1-138-03870-7: £110.00

eBook: 978-1-315-17723-6* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138038707

Dummy text to keep placeholderTEXTBOOK • READERMediterranean TimescapesFormative BritainA Geography of Age in the Roman EmpireThe Archaeology of Britain AD400-1100Ray Laurence, Bank account details updated SF 900227 17.8.16 DB and FrancescoTrifilo, Bronte AvenueBank account details updated SF 900227 17.8.16 DB

Martin Carver, University of York, UKSeries: Routledge World Archaeology

This book, built around the study of the representation of age and identity in 23,000 Latinfunerary epitaphs from the Western Mediterranean in the Roman era, will set out how the

This volume provides a detailed study of the archaeology of Britain and its inshore islandsbetween AD 400 and 1100. For the first time a single-author book treats early medieval

use of age in epitaphs and, thus, also time, varied across this region. The discrepancyBritain as a whole, enabling Carver to show that the primary cultural, political and ideologicalbetween the use of time to represent identity in death allows us to begin to understandfoundations of the island’s population were laid during this time. This is the first book in athe differences between the cultures of Italy and those of North Africa, Spain and southernGaul.

generation that presents the archaeology of this period in such a comprehensive fashionfor the whole of Britain, and is a crucial purchase for those people wishing to understandhow the islands of Britain developed in the early Medieval period. Routledge

September 2018: 234x156RoutledgeHb: 978-1-138-28875-1: £105.00Market: ArchaeologyeBook: 978-1-315-26770-8February 2018: 246x174: 560pp* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138288751Hb: 978-0-415-52474-2: £85.00

Pb: 978-0-415-52475-9: £26.99* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415524742

Dummy text to keep placeholderDummy text to keep placeholderPost-Conflict Archaeology and Cultural HeritageHistorical Archaeologies of Transhumance across

Europe Rebuilding Knowledge, Memory and Community from War-DamagedMaterial CultureEdited by Eugene Costello and Eva Svensson

Edited by Paul Newson, American University of Beirut,Lebanon and Ruth Young, University of Leicester, UkThe irreversible loss of monuments and sites is increasinglybecoming one of the serious consequences of conflict.Post-Conflict Archaeology and Cultural Heritage draws togetherpapers from archaeological and heritage professionals seekingpositive and pragmatic ways to deal with conflict-damaged sites.It aims to show that they can be a valuable resource rather thanan inevitable casualty of war, and that good practice can bringcommunities together and give them ownership of theirheritage.

The book is a mixture of the discussion of problems, suggestedplanning solutions and case studies, and will be of interest to

those working with post conflict communities as well as academics.

Series: Themes in Contemporary ArchaeologyTranshumance, the movement of people and livestock between environmental zones, hasformed an important aspect of many European farming systems for several thousand years,although they have declined markedly since the 19

th century.

This volume focusses on the archaeology of seasonal sites used by shepherds and cowherds,although the contributions are interdisciplinarity, bringing together documentary,cartographic, ethnographic and palaeoecological evidence. The book will appeal not onlyto archaeologists, but to historians, geographers, ethnographers, palaeoecologists andanyone interested in rural lifeways across Europe.

RoutledgeMarket: ArchaeologyMarch 2018: 297x210: 368ppHb: 978-0-815-38032-0: £115.00eBook: 978-1-351-21339-4* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780815380320 Routledge

Market: ArchaeologyNovember 2017: 234x156: 292ppHb: 978-1-138-20292-4: £85.00Pb: 978-1-138-29656-5: £29.99eBook: 978-1-315-47273-7* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138296565

Browse and order online:www.routledge.com/archaeology

ARCHAEOLOGY BY PERIOD OR REGION4

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TEXTBOOK • READERDummy text to keep placeholderThe Cycladic and Aegean Islands in PrehistoryRock Art and the Wild MindIna BergVisual Imagery in Mesolithic Northern EuropeAnalyzing the development of the Cycladic and Aegean islands from their earliest settlementin the Mesolithic through to the end of the Mycenaean period, The Cycladic and Aegean

Ingrid FuglestvedtRock Art and the Wild Mind presents a study of Mesolithic rockart on the Scandinavian Peninsula, which often depicts humanconfrontation with big game and can be explained as a productof the Mesolithic mind "in action". In the final stages of theMesolithic this ‘animic’ rock art eventually gives way to a ‘totemic’style and it is suggested that this can be interpreted asrepresenting an increased focus on human society. This willinterest students of rock art as well as scholars working on thehistorical developments of prehistoric hunter-gatherers inNorthern Europe. It will also appeal to students and academicsin the fields of art history, aesthetics and the work of Lévi-Straus.

Routledge

Islands in Prehistory traces the major environmental, cultural and religious transformationsof these communities. Fully up-to-date, this book considers well-known historicalexcavations as well as the results of important excavations undertaken over the last 20years. The book's chronological structure delivers the necessary factual knowledge of sites,objects, debates and theoretical frameworks, while extra ‘context’ sections provide a criticalanalysis of an important theme for each time period.

RoutledgeMarket: ArchaeologyJanuary 2018: 246x189Hb: 978-0-415-81187-3: £90.00Pb: 978-0-415-81188-0: £29.99* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415811873

Market: ArchaeologyDecember 2017: 234x156: 438ppHb: 978-1-138-09053-8: £105.00eBook: 978-1-315-10858-2* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138090538

Dummy text to keep placeholderDummy text to keep placeholderThe Elamite WorldThe Archaeology of Early Roman ReligionEdited by Javier Álvarez-Mon, Macquarie University, Australia, Gian Pietro Baselloand Yasmina Wicks

Elizabeth Colantoni, University of Rochester, USASeries: Routledge Studies in Archaeology

Series: Routledge WorldsThis book is the first to investigate early Roman religion on the basis of archaeologicalevidence. Author Elizabeth Colantoni uses the archaeological data to construct a new The Elamite World assembles a group of forty international scholars to contribute their

expertise to the production of a solid, lavishly illustrated, English language treatment ofnarrative about early Roman religious practices, examining the role and nature of sacredspace; the religious calendar; gods, priests and worshippers; ritual and sacrifice; and death Elamite civilization, covering topics such as its physical setting, historical development,rites and ancestor cult in early Rome. The result is a fuller and more accurate picture of languages and people, material culture, art, science, religion and society. This comprehensivechanging early Roman religious practices that also provides the basis for a better and ambitious survey seeks for Elam, hardly a household name, a noteworthy place in ourunderstanding of the more widely attested religion of the Romans who lived during theperiod of the Roman republic and after.

shared cultural heritage. It will be both a valuable introductory text for a general audienceand a definitive reference source for students and academics.

Routledge RoutledgeMarket: Archaeology Market: ArchaeologyNovember 2018: 229 x 152: 208pp January 2018: 246x174: 832ppHb: 978-0-415-83664-7: £105.00 Hb: 978-1-138-99989-3: £175.00eBook: 978-0-203-45824-2 eBook: 978-1-315-65803-2* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415836647 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138999893

Dummy text to keep placeholder2nd Edition • TEXTBOOK • READERThe Emperor in the Byzantine WorldThe Archaeology of Medieval IrelandPapers from the 47th Spring Symposium of Byzantine StudiesTerry B. Barry, Trinity College, Dublin.

The Archaeology of Medieval Ireland has become an indispensable guide to the archaeologyof this crucial period in Ireland’s history, providing an overview of the methods and practice

Edited by Shaun TougherSeries: Publications of the Society for the Promotion of Byzantine Studies

of medieval Irish archaeology as well as a major survey of the monuments and material ofThemes covered by the contributions in this volume include: questions of dynasty andByzantine imperial families; imperial literature (the emperor as subject and author); the

the period. This new edition brings the work up-to-date especially in considering thegrowth in urban archaeology in Ireland driven by development in the construction industry.

imperial court and the emperor’s men; imperial duties and the emperor as ruler; and theProgress in digital technology has also revolutionised archaeological practice and thematerial emperor, including imperial images and spaces. The volume fills a need in theinformation now available informs the book throughout. New research on the western

third of the Island and the domination of the Gaelic Irish is also included. field and the market, and also brings new and cutting edge approaches to the study ofthe Byzantine emperor.

RoutledgeRoutledgeMarket: General interest, students and teachers of medieval archaeology and historyJuly 2018: 234x156: 288ppOctober 2018: 246x174: 240ppHb: 978-1-138-21868-0: £95.00Hb: 978-0-415-67593-2: £85.00* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138218680Pb: 978-0-415-67594-9: £29.99

* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415675932

Companion WebsiteNew in Paperbacke-InspectionComplimentary Exam Copy

5ARCHAEOLOGY BY PERIOD OR REGION

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Dummy text to keep placeholderDummy text to keep placeholderThe World of Great ZimbabweThe Indian Ocean Trade in AntiquityEdited by Innocent PikirayiPolitical, Cultural, and Economic ImpactsSeries: Routledge WorldsEdited by Matthew Adam CobbThe World of Great Zimbabwe details the development of complex societies in the regionsouth of the Zambezi River which includes the Zimbabwe plateau. Starting with the origins

In this volume new studies from international scholars in the field of Classics, Archaeology,Near Eastern Studies and Indology explore the economic, political and cultural impact of

of this development in the Shashe-Limpopo Basin the book explores the rise, developmentthis trade on these diverse societies. The book is divided into three parts: the first sectionand decline of Great Zimbabwe in all its complexity. A range of African and internationalexplores the development of trade in the Indian Ocean; the second investigates the impactscholars analyze multiple dimensions of Great Zimbabwe as an entangled place, city,which the consumption of Indian Ocean goods had on societal developments; and theempire, archaeological site, and archaeological and imagined entity, situating these withinthird considers how interconnections between these various cultures impacted upon on

literary and artistic creations. broader spatial and temporal contexts in a manner that has never previously beenattempted.Routledge

August 2018: 234x156: 256pp RoutledgeHb: 978-1-138-73826-3: £105.00 June 2018: 450ppeBook: 978-1-315-18487-6 Hb: 978-1-138-91347-9: £165.00* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138738263 eBook: 978-1-315-69144-2

* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138913479

Dummy text to keep placeholderDummy text to keep placeholderThe World of the Oxus CivilizationThe Nasca WorldEdited by Bertille Lyonnet and Nadezhda DubovaEdited by Katharina Schreiber and Kevin VaughnSeries: Routledge WorldsSeries: Routledge WorldsThe book presents a synthesis of current research on the Oxus Civilization, which rose anddeveloped at the turn of the 3rd to 2nd millennia BC. First discovered in the 1970s, it has

The Nasca World provides the first in-depth exploration, with over 40 chapters, of the Nascacivilization, one of the most distinctive and impressive ancient civilizations of the Andean

engendered many different interpretations, which are explored in this volume by anregion of South America. Dating from roughly AD 1 to 700, Nasca is known for its brilliantlyinternational group of archaeologists and researchers. They cover all aspects of thiscolored ceramics, enigmatic geoglyphs, extensive cemeteries, and the pyramids andfascinating culture: architecture, material culture, grave goods; religion; migrations; andplatform mounds of the ancient pilgrimage center at Cahuachi. Each aspect of this importanttrade and interactions with neighbouring civilizations. The volume also examines thecivilization is examined by scholars actively researching in the area providing readers with

the original sources for new and exciting information. BMAC’s roots in previous local cultures, explores its environmental and chronologicalcontext, and finally looks into the reasons for its collapse.Routledge

August 2018 RoutledgeHb: 978-1-138-91348-6: £165.00 December 2018eBook: 978-1-315-69143-5 Hb: 978-1-138-72287-3: £165.00* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138913486 eBook: 978-1-315-19335-9

* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138722873

Dummy text to keep placeholderDummy text to keep placeholderTravellers in TimeThe VikingsImagining Movement in the Ancient Aegean WorldNeil Price, University of Uppsala, Sweden

Series: Peoples of the Ancient WorldFrom an author at the forefront of some of the major aspects ofVikings research, this short introduction to the Vikings fills a largegap in the current coverage offered and includes examinationof the Vikings and religion, society, economy, and their expansionoverseas. Neil Price presents students with an excellentintroduction to a widely-studied and fascinating subject.

Routledge

Saro WallaceSeries: Routledge Studies in ArchaeologyTravellers in Time re-evaluates the extent to which the earliest Mediterranean civilizationswere affected by population movement. By assessing a broad range of recent archaeologicaland ancient textual data from the Aegean and central and east Mediterranean via fivecomprehensive studies, this book makes a compelling case for rethinking issues such asidentity, agency, materiality and experience through an understanding of movement astransformative.

This innovative and timely study will be of interest to advanced undergraduates,post-graduate students and scholars in the fields of history and Classical archaeology.

RoutledgeMarket: Archaeology

Market: Archaeology / History April 2018: 234x156: 618ppAugust 2018: 216x138 Hb: 978-1-138-08848-1: £105.00Hb: 978-0-415-34349-7: £85.00 eBook: 978-1-315-10983-1Pb: 978-0-415-34350-3: £22.99 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138088481* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415343497

Browse and order online:www.routledge.com/archaeology

ARCHAEOLOGY BY PERIOD OR REGION6

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Dummy text to keep placeholderViolence and Power in Ancient EgyptImage and Ideology before the New Kingdom

Laurel BestockSeries: Routledge Studies in EgyptologyThis book explores the use of images of violence as a tactic ofroyal power in Egypt before the New Kingdom, from theNeolithic through to the end of the Middle Kingdom, and byanalysing these scenes of violence demonstrates how intimatelysuch imagery was linked to kingship. Both art historical andarchaeological, it looks individually at each representation todiscuss how and what it communicated, but alsocomprehensively gathers images and organizes themcontextually patterns can be traced. Heavily illustrated, it is botha book of ideas and a catalog, thought-provoking in its ownright, but also an indispensable tool for future research by others.

RoutledgeMarket: EgyptologyOctober 2017: 234x156: 314ppHb: 978-1-138-68505-5: £105.00eBook: 978-1-315-54350-5* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138685055

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7ARCHAEOLOGY BY PERIOD OR REGION

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TEXTBOOK • READERSTUDENT REFERENCEStrategies for Quantitative ResearchArchaeological Theory: The BasicsArchaeology by NumbersBob Chapman

Series: The Basics Grant S. McCall, Tulane University, USAArchaeological Theory: The Basics is an accessible introduction to the interpretation ofarchaeological data and the archaeological use of theories taken from both the biological

Strategies for Quantitative Research is a concise and readable textbook on the use of statisticsin archaeology and a handbook for professionals in the field aimed at answering commonly

and the social sciences to develop claims to knowledge about the past of human cultures occurring questions. With a focus on the logic of statistical inference, which researchersand societies. Showing clearly how theory relates to practice and evidence to its rarely think through before undertaking quantitative analysis, it deals with fundamentalinterpretation, this volume is an indispensable guide to an often confusing but essentialcomponent of archaeology.

issues such as: 1) understanding what kinds of data are common in the field of archaeology,2) knowing what the goals of various forms of analysis are, and 3) understanding theassumptions of major statistical models.Routledge

August 2018: 198x129 RoutledgeHb: 978-1-138-10124-1: £85.00 Market: ArchaeologyPb: 978-1-138-10123-4: £16.99 February 2018: 246x189: 264ppeBook: 978-1-315-65709-7 Hb: 978-1-138-63253-0: £110.00* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138101241 Pb: 978-1-138-63252-3: £29.99

eBook: 978-1-315-20820-6* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138632530

Dummy text to keep placeholderDummy text to keep placeholderThe Archaeology of Portable ArtArchaeology and Archaeological Information in the

Digital Society Southeast Asian, Pacific, and Australian PerspectivesEdited by Michelle Langley, Mirani Litster, The Australian National University, DuncanWright and Sally K May

Edited by ISTO HUVILAArchaeology and Archaeological Information in the Digital Society shows how the digitisationof archaeological information, tools and workflows and their interplay with both old and Significant discoveries in Southeast Asia, Australia, and the Pacific islands provide important

information on human development but they are often overlooked by researchers. Withnew non-digital practices throughout the archaeological information process affect thethe existence of comparable portable art objects in the recent past, portable art in thisoutcomes of archaeological work and in the end, our general understanding of the humanregion is an exciting discipline. The Archaeology of Portable Art provides the firstcomprehensive narrative of portable art, including global comparisons, for the region.

past. With fields studies from museums and society, and innovative new academic research,this engaging text will be of interest to archaeologists across the board.

RoutledgeRoutledgeMarket: ArchaeologyMarket: ArchaeologyApril 2018: 234x156: 346ppJune 2018: 234x156: 250ppHb: 978-1-138-23776-6: £115.00Hb: 978-0-415-78843-4: £105.00eBook: 978-1-315-29911-2eBook: 978-1-315-22527-2* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138237766* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415788434

Dummy text to keep placeholderMultispecies ArchaeologyEdited by Suzanne E. Pilaar Birch, University of Georgia University of GeorgiaSeries: Archaeological OrientationsMultispecies Archaeology explores the issue of ecological and cultural novelty in thearchaeological record from a multispecies perspective. Encompassing more than just ourrelationships with animals the book considers what we can learn about the human pastwithout humans as the focus of the question. The volume digs deep into our understandingof interaction with plants, fungi, microbes, and even DNA. Multispecies Archaeologyexamineswhat it means to be human—and non-human—from a variety of perspectivesproviding a new lens through which to view the past.

RoutledgeMarket: ArchaeologyFebruary 2018: 246x174: 432ppHb: 978-1-138-89898-1: £175.00eBook: 978-1-315-70770-9* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138898981

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ARCHAEOLOGICAL THEORY8

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Dummy text to keep placeholderDummy text to keep placeholderGlobal Social ArchaeologiesActive CollectionsAn IntroductionEdited by Elizabeth Wood, Rainey Tisdale and Trevor Jones

Approaching the question of modern museum collectionstewardship from a position of ‘tough love’, the authors arguethat the museum field risks being constrained by rigid ways ofthinking about objects. Examining the field’s relationship toobjects, artifacts, and specimens, the volume explores thequestion of stewardship through the dissection of a broad rangeof issues, including questions of ‘quality over quantity’, emotionalattachment, dispassionate cataloging, and cognitive biases incuratorship. The essays look to insights from fields as diverse asforest management, library science, and the psychology ofcompulsive hoarding, to inform and innovate collectionpractices.

Koji Mizoguchi and Claire E SmithWritten by two presidents of the World Archaeological Congress,this volume introduces the readers to the various theoreticaland methodological frameworks available for the socialarchaeology of the past and their implications for contemporarysocieties.

RoutledgeMarket: Museum & Heritage StudiesNovember 2017: 234x156: 168ppHb: 978-1-629-58522-2: £110.00Pb: 978-1-629-58523-9: £29.99eBook: 978-1-315-14515-0* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781629585239

Dummy text to keep placeholderConflict ArchaeologyMaterialities of Collective Violence from Prehistory to Late Antiquity

Edited by Manuel Fernández-Götz and Nico RoymansSeries: Themes in Contemporary ArchaeologyConflict Archaeology presents a series of case-studies on conflictarchaeology in ancient Europe from the Neolithic to LateAntiquity.

Along key battlefields such as the Tollense Valley, Baecula, Alesia,Kalkriese and Harzhorn, the volume incorporates many sourcesof evidence that can be directly related with past conflictscenarios, including defensive works, military camps,battle-related ritual deposits, and symbolic representations ofviolence in iconography and grave goods. The aim is to explorethe material evidence for the study of warfare, and to provide

new theoretical and methodological insights into the archaeology of mass violence inancient Europe and beyond.

RoutledgeMarket: ArchaeologyDecember 2017: 297x210: 236ppHb: 978-1-138-50211-6: £105.00eBook: 978-1-315-14477-1* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138502116

Dummy text to keep placeholderDolmens in the LevantJames A FraserSeries: The Palestine Exploration Fund AnnualBy tightly defining the term dolmen itself, this book brings these mysterious monumentsinto sharper focus. Drawing on historical, archaeological and geological sources, it showsthat the dolmens mostly concentrate in the eastern escarpment of the Jordan Rift Valleyand in the Galilean hills and near proto-urban settlements of the Early Bronze I period.Dolmens in the Levant is essential for anyone interested in the rise of civilisations in theancient Middle East, and particularly those who have wondered at the origins of theseenigmatic burial monuments that dominate the landscape.

RoutledgeMarket: ArchaeologyFebruary 2018: 382ppHb: 978-1-138-55185-5: £105.00

RoutledgeMarket: ArchaeologyJuly 2018: 229 x 152: 192ppHb: 978-1-629-58306-8: £80.00Pb: 978-1-629-58307-5: £21.99* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781629583068

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Historical ArchaeologyA Guide to Substantive and Theoretical ContributionsRobert L SchuylerA sourcebook devoted to historical archaeology, a significant field of study which blends together the theories and methods of anthropology, history, and archaeology. RoutledgeMarket: Psychotherapy/TraumaApril 2018: 304ppHb: 978-0-415-78592-1: £100.00Pb: 978-0-895-03008-5: £71.99* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415785921

Spatial HumanitiesStuart DunnSeries: Digital Research in the Arts and HumanitiesThe need for a book length study which traces a trajectory between historical/cultural constructions of place - what this author calls ‘humanistic place’ - and applications of the GeoWeb has been clear for some time. This book provides such a trajectory by examining current approaches to the analysis and definition of place in three fundamental historical and cultural discourse spaces of the humanities, text, maps, and objects. Next to this, it examines how place is created in the contemporary digital world.RoutledgeMarket: Humanities, Media, HistoryJune 2018: 234x156: 224ppHb: 978-1-138-22357-8: £105.00eBook: 978-1-315-40446-2* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138223578

* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138551855

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9ARCHAEOLOGY (OTHERS)

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Dummy text to keep placeholderWater and Society from Ancient Times to thePresentResilience, Decline, and RevivalEdited by Federica Sulas and Innocent Pikirayi, University of PretoriaWater and Society, through a range of international case studies, presents theoreticaldiscussions on the historical relationships between water and societies. It emphasises theuse of historical and archaeological methods to define the nature and sustainability ofwater-uses and human responses to changing water conditions. Exploring historicalknowledge to provide information on present challenges, it highlights the array of solutionsand mechanisms societies have developed to deal with water in all its forms. The volumecomplements and expands a growing body of studies that discuss how ancient watersystems can relate to resilience and sustainability in the present and inform the future.

RoutledgeMarket: ArchaeologyFebruary 2018: 234x156: 440ppHb: 978-1-138-67633-6: £105.00eBook: 978-1-315-56014-4* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138676336

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ARCHAEOLOGY (OTHERS)10

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Dummy text to keep placeholderDummy text to keep placeholderCollecting and Conserving Net ArtA Museum in PublicMoving beyond Conventional MethodsRe-visioning Canada’s Royal Ontario MuseumAnnet Dekker, University of Amsterdam, The NetherlandsSusan Ashley, Northumbria University, UKCollecting and Conserving Net Art explores the qualities and characteristics of net art and itsinfluence on conservation practices. By addressing and answering some of the challenges

Series: Museums in FocusNot satisfied with the assertion that museums have taken great strides in becomingrepresentative, relevant and open in their preoccupations, A Museum in Public contends facing net art and providing an exploration of its intersections with conservation, the book

casts a new light on net art studies. Taking the performative and interpretive rolesthat the supposedly public nature of their institutional role continues to be a rhetoricalconservators play into account, the book also demonstrates how practitioners can makeone. This book critically examines museums as institutions of the public sphere, questioningmore informed decisions when responding to, critically analysing or working with net art,in particular software-based processes.

what assumptions are made about the publicness of their operations. Using as a case studythe Royal Ontario Museum (ROM), Canada’s largest museum, the book interrogates thepublic nature and political dynamics of the ROM as it completed a multi-million dollararchitectural project and adopted a new vision of the museum.

RoutledgeMarket: Conservation/ArtMay 2018: 234x156: 240pp

Routledge Hb: 978-0-815-38241-6: £115.00Market: Museum Studies eBook: 978-1-351-20863-5November 2018: 216x138: 104pp * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780815382416Hb: 978-1-138-57926-2: £115.00eBook: 978-1-351-26248-4* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138579262

Dummy text to keep placeholderDummy text to keep placeholderCollecting Computer-based TechnologyAn Ethnography of New Zealand’s National MuseumCuratorial Expertise at the Smithsonian MuseumsGrappling with Biculturalism at Te PapaPetrina Foti, Nazareth College, USATanja Schubert-McArthur, Waitangi Tribunal, New ZealandSeries: Routledge Research in Museum StudiesSeries: Routledge Research in Museum StudiesThis book presents how curators at the history and technology museums of the SmithsonianInstitution have met the challenges of collecting computer-based technology. With diverse

The Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa has been celebrated as an internationalleader for its bicultural concept and partnership with Maori in all aspects of the museum,

case studies ranging from DNA analysers to Herbie Hancock’s music synthesizers, frombut how does this relationship with the indigenous partner work in practice? An EthnographyiPods to born-digital photographs, from the laptop used during the filming of Sex and theof New Zealand’s National Museum reveals the challenges, benefits and politics ofCity to ‘Stanley’ the self-driving car, this book reveals and reflects upon cultures and practicesimplementing a bicultural framework in everyday museum practice. Providing an analysisof curatorial expertise and how curators can be creative in their approach and preparedto work in new ways to better achieve their objectives.

of the voices of museum employees, the book reflects their multifaceted understandingsof biculturalism and collaboration.

RoutledgeRoutledgeMarket: Museum StudiesMarket: Museum Studies & Heritage StudiesAugust 2018: 234x156: 192ppJuly 2018: 234x156: 240ppHb: 978-0-815-36994-3: £115.00Hb: 978-0-815-35908-1: £115.00eBook: 978-1-351-17434-3eBook: 978-1-351-12139-2* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780815369943* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780815359081

Dummy text to keep placeholderDummy text to keep placeholderCollecting the PastBranding the Global GuggenheimBritish Collectors and their Collections from the 18th to the 20thCenturies

Cultural Diplomacy in the Neoliberal AgeNatalia Grincheva, University of Melbourne, AustraliaSeries: Museums in Focus Edited by Toby Burrows and Cynthia Johnston

Series: Routledge Research in Museum StudiesThis book traces the Guggenheim’s development from a traditional cultural diplomacyactor to a nonpartisan player in the global arena, driven by institutional interests. Through Collecting the Past brings together the latest research on several significant British collectors

from the eighteenth to the twentieth centuries. Contributors to the volume examine theanalysis of international Guggenheim engagements, the book identifies and explores anemergence of a new type of museum diplomacy grounded primarily in institutional phenomenon of collecting in a variety of settings and across a range of different materials.ambitions for global presence and recognition. This new "diplomacy" is based on strong Considering the aims and motives that led these collectors to assemble such remarkable

collections, the book also examines the fate of these collections after the collectors' deaths.museum commitments to cosmopolitan values and transnational issues, attracting a muchlarger international constituency and providing access to global economic, cultural andsocial resources. Routledge

Market: Museum Studies & Heritage StudiesRoutledge April 2018: 234x156: 192ppMarket: Anthropology Hb: 978-0-815-38234-8: £115.00January 2018: 216x138: 128pp eBook: 978-1-351-20855-0Hb: 978-0-815-37094-9: £45.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780815382348eBook: 978-1-351-19027-5* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780815370949

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11MUSEUM & HERITAGE STUDIES

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Dummy text to keep placeholderDummy text to keep placeholderCultural Heritage Infrastructures in DigitalHumanities

Conservation of 20th Century FurnitureJake Kaner, Buckinghamshire New University, UK and Clive Edwards, LoughboroughUniversity, UK

Edited by Agiatis Benardou, Erik Champion, Costis Dallasand Lorna HughesSeries: Digital Research in the Arts and HumanitiesWhat are the leading tools and archives in digital culturalheritage? How can they be integrated into researchinfrastructures to better serve their intended audiences? In thisbook authors from a wide range of countries, representing someof the best research projects in digital humanities related tocultural heritage discuss their latest findings, both in terms ofnew tools and archives, and how they are used (or not used) byboth specialists and by the general public.

Routledge

Series: Routledge Series in Conservation and MuseologyConservation of 20

th Century Furniture provides a comprehensive coverage of materials and

techniques that are encountered in 20th century furniture, through both a contextual pointof view and through a range of practice perspectives. The furniture discussed ranges fromdesigner craftsman individually-made pieces to factory produced batch items, and includescabinet work, decoration, surface finishes and upholstery, observing the traditional repertoireof materials and the innovative materials and processes introduced during the century. Itisthe primary resourse for those studying and conserving 20th century furniture, and is alsoof interest to curators, dealers and collectors.

RoutledgeMarket: Conservation/Museum StudiesSeptember 2018: 246x189: 336ppHb: 978-0-750-65602-3: £85.00

Market: Digital Humanities* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780750656023October 2017: 234x156: 172ppHb: 978-1-472-44712-8: £105.00eBook: 978-1-315-57527-8* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781472447128

Dummy text to keep placeholderDummy text to keep placeholderCultural Heritage, Ethics and ContemporaryMigrations

Cultural Diplomacy and the Heritage of EmpireNegotiating Post-Colonial ReturnsCynthia Scott Edited by Cornelius Holtorf, Andreas Pantazatos and Geoffrey ScarreSeries: Routledge Studies in Culture and Development Cultural Heritage, Ethics and Contemporary Migrations breaks new ground in our

understanding of the challenges faced by heritage practitioners and researchers in theBy the mid-1970s, the emerging Third World coalition was agitating for the return ofhistorically significant museum objects to former colonial countries from museums in contemporary world of mass migration, where people come into contact with heritage

and relocate their own heritage. The volume focuses on issues affecting archaeologicalEurope. The issue had taken on a new diplomatic urgency and yet few European countriesheritage sites and artefacts, which help determine and mainten social identity, a roletook action to address the problem. This book explores this issue and, in particular, theproblematised when populations are in flux as a result of immigration. This diverse andactions of the Netherlands, one of the only countries that returned a number of importantauthoritative collection brings together international specialists to discuss socio-politicaland ethical implications for the management of archaeological heritage in global society.

objects after 1977. By introducing an atypical case, this book expands the field of culturalrestitution studies, and offers a more nuanced understanding of its connection toidentity-making through the extension of post-colonial cultural diplomacy. Routledge

June 2018RoutledgeHb: 978-1-138-78821-3: £90.00Market: HeritagePb: 978-1-138-78822-0: £29.99September 2018: 234x156: 208pp* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138788213Hb: 978-0-815-38231-7: £115.00

eBook: 978-1-351-16424-5* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780815382317

Dummy text to keep placeholderDummy text to keep placeholderCultures of the CountrysideCultural Heritage and the FutureArt, Museum, Heritage, and Environment, 1970-2015Edited by Cornelius Holtorf and Anders Högberg, Linnaeus University, Sweden

Series: Key Issues in Cultural Heritage Veronica SekulesThis book traces the relationship between the museum and themicro-cultures of the countryside over the last 50 years, whichhas been a period of extraordinary tensions and change for thecountryside. Global issues such as the political and socialimperatives to tackle population growth and climate changehave led to an increasing sense of a distributed responsibilityfor the world’s welfare, with strong local implications. Becauseof this, the countryside is ever more under pressure, and ofincreasing importance as a healthy provider of more and moreresources.

Routledge

Cultural Heritage and the Future for the first time brings together a diverse, internationalgroup of scholars and experts interested in the relations between cultural heritage andthe future. ‘Preserving the past for the future’ is an oft used phrase but what that futurewill be has never before attracted substantial research and debate in heritage studies. Thepresent book offers a balance of theoretical and empirical content, with extensivecase-studies from the US, Europe and Australia. Intended to stimulate multidisciplinarydebate and discussion the book will explicitly address an interdisciplinary audience withinheritage studies and heritage management.

RoutledgeMarket: ArchaeologyMarch 2018: 234x156: 200ppHb: 978-1-138-82900-8: £90.00Pb: 978-1-138-82901-5: £29.99

Market: Museum & Heritage Studies* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138829008November 2017: 234x156: 298ppHb: 978-1-472-42346-7: £105.00eBook: 978-1-315-57558-2* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781472423467

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MUSEUM & HERITAGE STUDIES12

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Dummy text to keep placeholderDummy text to keep placeholderDisplaced ThingsCurating the ContemporarySandra H. Dudley, University of Leicester, UKThe Culture and Context of the 21st Century CuratorDisplaced Things explores the movements of material things from the starting point andperspective of the object. It does so through the lens of displacement, drawing on earlier

Catherine McDermottCurating the Contemporary is a unique and useful book, which provides an exploration ofnew curatorial developments that have impacted not only on museum practice, but also work on forced migration and conceptualising displacement in relation to anthropological

ritual theory. It aims not only to augment understandings of the significance of things andacross international creative industries. Showcasing case studies of curating practice, eachthe complexities of their relationships with human beings, but also to problematize notionspart explores the key changes contemporary curatorial practice has brought about. Theof the settings through which objects move – including those of museum and ‘heritage’,definable as they are by their particular approaches to the re-contextualisations of things.

book combines an overview of this cultural transition, bringing together a unique andexperienced insight into theory, which is illustrated by practice.

RoutledgeRoutledgeMarket: Museum Studies/ArchaeologyJuly 2018: 246x174: 208ppOctober 2018: 208ppHb: 978-1-409-44445-9: £95.00Hb: 978-0-415-84046-0: £85.00eBook: 978-1-315-57559-9Pb: 978-0-415-84047-7: £24.99* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781409444459* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415840460

Dummy text to keep placeholderDummy text to keep placeholderEmotion, Affective Practices, and the Past in thePresent

Curatorial ActivismKylie Message, The Australian National UniversitySeries: Museums in Focus Edited by Laurajane Smith, Australia National University, Australia, Margaret Wetherell

and Gary Campbell, Australian National UniversityCuratorial Activism builds on Social Movement Studies to build and examine theoreticalpropositions around the tactics of curatorial activism and contemporary museology. With Series: Key Issues in Cultural Heritagea focus on case studies, it includes strategies for ‘activating’ historical archives and

Emotion, Affective Practices and the Past in the Present explores the ways emotion is embroiledand used in contemporary engagements with the past, particularly in contexts such as

collections-based data, and for engaging with an archaeology of the everyday to analyzethe material residue of protest sites. The ‘Occupy Museums’ activism, which bridges

heritage sites, museums, commemorations, political rhetoric and ideology, debates overeconomy, art, and discourses of privilege, provides a site of examination. This book’sissues of social memory and touristic uses of heritage sites. Including contributions frominterdisciplinary framework is drawn from sociology, history and political science, as well

as museum studies. academics and practitioners in a range of countries, the book reviews significant andconflicting academic debates on the nature and expression of affect and emotion and,Routledgethrough the use of case studies, draws out their implications for theory and practice withinheritage and museum studies.

Market: Museum StudiesDecember 2018Hb: 978-1-138-24012-4: £45.00 RoutledgeeBook: 978-1-315-29409-4 October 2018: 234x156: 328pp* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138240124 Hb: 978-0-815-37002-4: £110.00

Pb: 978-1-138-57929-3: £29.99eBook: 978-1-351-25096-2* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780815370024

Dummy text to keep placeholderDummy text to keep placeholderExhibitions as ResearchCuratorial ChallengesExperimental Methods in MuseumsInterdisciplinary Perspectives on Contemporary CuratingEdited by Peter BjerregaardEdited by Malene Vest Hansen, University of Copenhagen, Denmark, Anne Folke

Henningsen, University of Copenhagen, Denmark and Anne Gregersen, Universityof Copenhagen, Denmark

Series: Routledge Research in Museum StudiesExhibitions as Research explores new models for turning the museum into a hotspot forexperimental research in the humanities. Museums often see themselves as divided intoSeries: Routledge Research in Art Museums and Exhibitions

Curatorial Challenges investigates the challenges faced by curators in contemporary societyand explores which practices, ways of thinking and types of knowledge production curating

three main areas of work: research, heritage management and public communication,which often exist independently within the same institution. This volume asks: is it possibleto think of exhibitions and the process of making them as research in and of itself? Exploringexhibitions could challenge. Bringing together international curators and researchers fromhow concrete practices might be developed in museums, Exhibitions as Research highlightshow the potential for new research can be unlocked in an everyday museum setting.

the fields of art and cultural history, the book provides new research and perspectives onthe curatorial process and aims to bridge the traditional gap between theoretical andacademic museum studies and museum practices. Routledge

September 2018: 234x156RoutledgeHb: 978-1-138-64606-3: £85.00Market: Museum StudieseBook: 978-1-315-62777-9October 2018: 234x156: 232pp* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138646063Hb: 978-0-815-37006-2: £115.00

eBook: 978-1-351-17450-3* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780815370062

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13MUSEUM & HERITAGE STUDIES

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TEXTBOOK • READERDummy text to keep placeholderHeritage and InterpretationGender and HeritageEdited by Sheila Watson, Amy Barnes and Katy BunningPerformance, Place and PoliticsSeries: Leicester Readers in Museum StudiesEdited by Wera Grahn and Ross J. WilsonHeritage and Interpretation is an introductory reader for postgraduate students of heritagestudies, museum studies and those interested in how we conceptualise and use the past.

Series: Key Issues in Cultural HeritageGender and Heritage brings together a group of international scholars to examine theperformance, place and politics of gender within heritage. It provides a range of innovative Widening the scope of heritage studies by drawing on a range of disciplines as well as the

best from established sources, the book also explores heritage through new areas ofapproaches to using gender as a mode of enquiry. From the politics of museum displays,knowledge including emotion and affect, the politics of dissent, migration and interculturalthe exploration of pedagogy, the role of local initiatives, and the legal frameworks thatand participatory dimensions of heritage. This blending of traditional topics and emergingstructure representation, this volume’s diversity and objectives represent a challenge for

students, academics and professionals to rethink gender. trends, established theory and concepts from other disciplines enables the volume to offerreaders views of the past and future of this growing field.

RoutledgeRoutledgeMarket: ArchaeologyMarket: ArchaeologyFebruary 2018: 234x156: 288ppApril 2018: 246x174: 500ppHb: 978-1-138-20816-2: £110.00Hb: 978-1-138-95093-1: £100.00Pb: 978-1-138-20814-8: £32.99Pb: 978-1-138-95092-4: £36.99eBook: 978-1-315-46009-3* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138950931* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138208162

Dummy text to keep placeholderDummy text to keep placeholderHistoricising Heritage and EmotionsGenerative Systems ArtThe Affective Histories of Blood, Stone and LandThe Work of Ernest EdmondsEdited by Alicia MarchantFrancesca FrancoSeries: Routledge Studies in HeritageSeries: Digital Research in the Arts and HumanitiesHistoricising Heritage and Emotions considers the long affective history of heritage, examininghow emotions work to shape heritage both in the past and today. Comprising of fourteen

In this unique book the author explores the history of pioneering computer art and itscontribution to art history by way of examining Ernest Edmonds’ art from the late 1960s

carefully selected case-studies, the innovation of this volume lies in its historicalto the present day. Edmonds’ inventions of new concepts, tools and forms of art, alongmethodology, which recognises heritage and emotions to have complex, evolving andwith his close involvement with the communities of computer artists, provides the contextvibrant histories. The central question of the volume is: ‘how was heritage understood andfor discussion of the origins and implications of the relationship between art and technology.conceptualised in the past, and what role did emotions play in shaping heritage?’ In thisregard, the volume helps to elucidate what ‘heritage’ meant in different historical contexts.

Drawing on interviews with Edmonds and primary research in archives of his work, thebook offers a new contribution to the history of the development of digital art and placesEdmonds’ work in the context of contemporary art history. RoutledgeRoutledge Market: Heritage StudiesMarket: Digital Humanities July 2018: 234x156: 195ppOctober 2017: 234x156: 158pp Hb: 978-1-138-20282-5: £105.00Hb: 978-1-472-43600-9: £105.00 eBook: 978-1-315-47289-8eBook: 978-1-315-58163-7 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138202825* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781472436009

Dummy text to keep placeholderDummy text to keep placeholderIndigenous Communities and Museum CollectionsHeritage after ConflictWorlds ApartNorthern IrelandMichelle Horwood, Eastern Institute of Technology, New ZealandEdited by Elizabeth Crooke, University of Ulster, Northern Ireland and Thomas

Maguire Series: Museums in FocusThe year 2018 marks the twentieth anniversary of the signing of the Belfast Agreementthat initiated an uneasy peace in Northern Ireland after the forty years of The Troubles. The

Indigenous Communities and Museum Collections provides the first contextualized study ofa heritage assemblage, over time, from the mid-nineteenth century to the present day.

last twenty years, however, has still not been sufficient time to satisfactorily resolve the Proposing a method for indigenous engagement and making recommendations whenissue of how to deal with the events of the conflict and the dissonant heritages that both forging relationships based around indigenous cultural heritage, the book shows how togave rise to it and were, in turn, fuelled by it. Heritage after Conflict examines the work to negotiate power and authority within these assemblages. By doing this and acknowledgingwhich heritage is currently being put within Northern Ireland, whilst also locating it withinthe wider contexts of post-conflict societies, divided cities and dissonant heritages.

and communicating our difficult histories, Horwood argues that we can move fromcollaborative approaches to shared authority and indigenous self-determination in themuseum sphere and progress the task of decolonising the museum.Routledge

Market: Museum Studies & Heritage Studies RoutledgeAugust 2018: 234x156: 256pp Market: Museum StudiesHb: 978-0-815-38636-0: £115.00 July 2018: 216x138: 104ppeBook: 978-1-351-16432-0 Hb: 978-0-815-36993-6: £45.00* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780815386360 eBook: 978-1-351-25112-9

* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780815369936

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Dummy text to keep placeholderDummy text to keep placeholderMarie Antoinette at Petit TrianonIndigenous MuseologyHeritage Interpretation and Visitor PerceptionsInsights from Australia and Aotearoa New ZealandDenise Maior-BarronConal McCarthy, Victoria University of Wellington, New ZealandSeries: Routledge Studies in HeritageSeries: Museums in FocusThis book challenges common perceptions of Marie Antoinette, appraising the last Queenof France’s role in relation to the events of French Revolution through an original analysis

Indigenous Museology examines the emergence of indigenising museologies in New Zealand,Australia, the USA and Canada. As the first international comparative study of museums

of contemporary heritage practices and visitor perceptions at her former home, the Petitand indigenous people, the book produces new knowledge about indigenous ways ofTrianon. Providing an examination of the diverse range of contemporary images portrayingknowing, doing and being that are emerging from the intersection of museums, heritageMarie Antoinette, the book demonstrates how they affect the interpretation and perceptionand public history with native ontologies and epistemologies. Whilst McCarthyof Petit Trianon. By considering both producers and receivers of these cultural heritageacknowledges the specificities of national contexts, he also takes the time to explore theexponents, the book expands current understandings of twenty-first century culturalheritage perceptions in relation to tourism and popular culture.

commonalities and differences between them, thus providing a unique perspective neverattempted before.

RoutledgeRoutledgeMarket: Museum StudiesMarket: Museum StudiesApril 2018: 234x156: 320ppJune 2018: 216x138: 112ppHb: 978-1-138-56556-2: £105.00Hb: 978-1-138-57642-1: £45.00eBook: 978-1-315-12308-0eBook: 978-1-351-16440-5* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138565562* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138576421

STUDENT REFERENCE2nd Edition • NEW EDITIONMuseum and Gallery StudiesIntangible HeritageThe BasicsEdited by Laurajane Smith, Australian National University, Australia and Natsuko

Akagawa, University of Western Australia Rhiannon Mason, Newcastle University, UK, AlistairRobinson, Northern Gallery for Contemporary Art, UK andEmma CoffieldSeries: The BasicsMuseum and Gallery Studies: The Basics is an accessible guide forthe student approaching Museum and Gallery Studies for thefirst time. Taking a global view, it covers the key ideas,approaches and contentious issues in the field. Balancing theoryand practice, the book includes chronologies, glossaries andsuggestions for further reading. This user-friendly text is anessential read for anyone entering professions within museumsand galleries, or seeking to understand academic debates in thefield.

Series: Key Issues in Cultural HeritageThe new edition of Intangible Heritage assesses and reappraises the field of intangibleheritage since the last edition. It examines how policy has been implemented and exploresits specific impact on intangible heritage, knowledge bearers and communities, and theimplications of this for the continuing development of international and national heritagepolicies and practices. With a focus on conceptual and theoretical issues the book remainsan important reference for students and heritage professionals.

RoutledgeMarket: Archaeology, Heritage StudiesApril 2018: 234x156: 330ppHb: 978-1-138-10121-0: £85.00Pb: 978-1-138-10120-3: £28.99eBook: 978-1-315-65710-3Prev. Ed Hb: 978-0-415-47397-2 Routledge* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138101210 Market: Museum Studies

December 2017: 198x129: 236ppHb: 978-0-415-83454-4: £85.00Pb: 978-0-415-83455-1: £16.99eBook: 978-1-315-14857-1* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415834551

4th Edition • TEXTBOOK • READERDummy text to keep placeholderMuseum BasicsIntellectual Property, Cultural Property and

Intangible Cultural Heritage The International HandbookTimothy Ambrose, Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries ofLondon, UK and a Fellow of the Museums Association, UKand Crispin Paine, University College, Chichester, UKSeries: Heritage: Care-Preservation-ManagementDrawing from a wide range of practical experience, the authorsprovide a basic guide to all aspects of museum work, fromaudience development and education, through collectionsmanagement and conservation, to museum organisation andforward planning. Organised on a modular basis, Museum Basicscan be used as textbook for museum studies students, areference work to assist day-to-day museum management andas the key resource for professional development programmes.

It has been fully updated to address the recent changes in the museums world.

Edited by Christoph Antons, Deakin University, Australiaand William Logan, Deakin University, AustraliaSeries: Key Issues in Cultural HeritageIntellectual Property, Cultural Property and Intangible CulturalHeritage examines various notions of property, in particularcultural property and intellectual property, and how they areemployed in rights discourses by indigenous and localcommunities around the world.

There is a strong historical dimension to the book’s explorationof the interconnection between intellectual and culturalproperty, intangible cultural heritage and indigenous rightsdiscourses. UNESCO conventions, discussions in the World

Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO), the Convention on Biological Diversity and therecent emphasis on intangible heritage have provided various discourses and models. Routledge

Market: Museum Studies / Heritage StudiesMarch 2018: 246x174: 632ppRoutledge

Market: Heritage Studies/Law Hb: 978-1-138-29248-2: £110.00December 2017: 234x156: 264pp Pb: 978-1-138-29247-5: £32.99Hb: 978-1-138-79361-3: £110.00 eBook: 978-1-315-23289-8Pb: 978-1-138-79362-0: £29.99 Prev. Ed Hb: 978-0-415-61933-2eBook: 978-1-315-71428-8 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138292482* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138793620

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15MUSEUM & HERITAGE STUDIES

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5 Volume SetDummy text to keep placeholderMuseum StudiesMuseum Development and Cultural Representation

Edited by Rhiannon Mason, Newcastle University, UKSeries: Critical Concepts in Media and Cultural StudiesIn the last few decades Museum Studies has expandedenormously to become an internationally recognized and highlyinterdisciplinary academic field. It draws on subjects from acrossthe humanities and social sciences, including Art History, CulturalStudies, Ethnography, Cultural Geography, History, Sociology,Economics, Business, Marketing, and Tourism Studies. (And,beyond the academy, it has also benefited from significant

contributions made by cultural policy-makers.)RoutledgeMarket: Museum StudiesJune 2018: 234x156: 1736ppHb: 978-1-138-01435-0: £1125.00* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138014350

Dummy text to keep placeholderMuseum ThresholdsThe Design and Media of ArrivalEdited by Ross Parry, Ruth Page and Alex Moseley, University of Leicester, UKSeries: Routledge Research in Museum StudiesMuseum Thresholds is a progressively interdisciplinary volume, in which a range ofinternational experts explore the importance and potential of entrance spaces for visitorexperience. The chapters, in the three themed sections, explore a range of museumthresholds: first as a problem space; then through different media; and finally from theperspective of other subjects and professions (performance, gaming, retail and discoursestudies) each of which have much to bring to future thinking and design.

RoutledgeMarket: ArchaeologyJune 2018: 234x156: 190ppHb: 978-1-138-64603-2: £105.00eBook: 978-1-315-62779-3* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138646032

Dummy text to keep placeholderMuseums and Indigenous Peoplesrethinking museum theory and practice through indigenousperspectives

Planning a Museum in the Kelabit Highlands, Malaysian BorneoJonathan Sweet and Meghan KellyThe Kelabit people are the least populous of the indigenous tribes of Borneo and were the last to encounter western colonialism; they are predominately Christians in a country where Islam is the state religion. This community has undergone immense social change that has ended some aspects of their culture and endangered others, resulting in Kelabit leaders calling for safeguards. The authors of this book address local agency and participation in the processes of conservation via the development of a museum and cultural centre in the Kelabit Highlands. They had privileged access to the community and they document concerns, aspirations and the development strategies of the museum all within historical, political, cultural, theoretical and practical dimensions. With continuing threats to the diversity of natural and cultural heritage in Asia, the widespread importance of local agency highlighted in this book has relevance to current and future practices in museology & cultural heritage.RoutledgeJuly 2018: 234x156: 130ppHb: 978-1-138-55435-1: £110.00Pb: 978-1-472-48097-2: £35.00eBook: 978-0-203-70222-2* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138554351

Dummy text to keep placeholderMuseum Diplomacy in the Digital AgeNatalia Grincheva, University of Melbourne, AustraliaSeries: Museum MeaningsMuseum Diplomacy in the Digital Age explores online museum spaces as sites of contemporary cultural diplomacy. Building on scholarship that highlighted how museums can constitute and regulate citizens, construct national communities, and project messages across borders, the book explores the political powers of museums in their online spaces. Digital media allow museums to reach far beyond their physical locations to communicate with larger and more diverse audiences. Evaluating the online capacities of museums to exert cultural impacts, the book aims to illuminate how online museum narratives shape audience perceptions and redefine their cultural attitudes and identities.

RoutledgeMarket: Museum StudiesSeptember 2018: 246x174: 184ppHb: 978-0-815-36998-1: £110.00Pb: 978-0-815-36999-8: £29.99eBook: 978-1-351-25100-6* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780815369981

Dummy text to keep placeholderMuseum LearningTheory and Research as Tools for Enhancing Practice

Jill Hohenstein and Theano Moussouri, University CollegeLondon, UKMuseum Learning employs a ‘learning’ lens to highlight theinsights and practical applications that theoretical approachescan offer museum studies students, practitioners and researchersworking in informal learning contexts such as museums,aquariums, zoos and botanical gardens, and historicalre-enactments, among others. The volume looks beyondtraditional or cognitive notions of learning, offering new ideas onaffective modes of learning which take into account interests,attitudes and emotions. This book will shed light on variousapproaches to informal learning allowing students and informal

practitioners to create more effective environments for learning.

Marzia VaruttiSeries: Museum MeaningsMuseums and Indigenous Peoples provides an international, comparative exploration ofrelationships between Indigenous Peoples and museums. Indigenous Peoples areincreasingly involved in the representation and curation of their heritage in museums andare engendering major changes in the way museums think and work. This volume examinesthe demands put forward by Indigenous Peoples to museums and critically discusses theireffects on museum theory and practice. Museums and Indigenous Peoples throughinternational case studies provides a better understanding of how Indigenous Peoples aretransforming museum work.RoutledgeOctober 2018: 246x174

Routledge Hb: 978-1-138-90193-3: £85.00Market: Archaeology & Museum Studies Pb: 978-1-138-90436-1: £29.99October 2017: 246x174: 320pp eBook: 978-1-315-69638-6Hb: 978-1-138-90112-4: £110.00 * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138901933Pb: 978-1-138-90113-1: £29.99eBook: 978-1-315-69644-7* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138901131

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MUSEUM & HERITAGE STUDIES16

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Dummy text to keep placeholderMuseums, Power, KnowledgeSelected Essays

Tony Bennett, University of Western Sydney, AustraliaMuseum, Power, Knowledge brings together a collection ofessays probing the relations between museums and society byone of the world’s leading critical museum theorists. Drawingon and elaborating Michel Foucault’s concepts of disciplinary,governmental, sovereign, and pastoral power, and ranging acrossmuseums of natural history, anthropology, history and artmuseums, the essays offer distinctive perspective on the politicallogics that have shaped the development of public museumsfrom the early 19

th century to the present.

RoutledgeMarket: Museum StudiesNovember 2017: 234x156: 340ppHb: 978-1-138-67589-6: £110.00Pb: 978-1-138-67588-9: £29.99eBook: 978-1-315-56038-0* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138675889

Dummy text to keep placeholderMust See! The Rise of the Blockbuster ExhibitionThe Australian SceneAnna Lawrenson and Chiara O'ReillyThis book examines the current ubiquity of blockbuster exhibitions from three perspectives - the institutions, their stakeholders and audiences - to establish how central they are to the Australian and international experience of culture. Drawing on original interdisciplinaryresearch - informed by art history, museology and social history alongside interviews with key figures in the cultural sector - the authors present a sustained analysis of blockbuster exhibitions, highlighting the impact of changes in government policy and funding models which laid the foundations for current practice. They also articulate the important role that individuals have played in promoting the format and fostering audiences while considering these large scale temporary exhibitions across all types of museums and galleries. The core themes and trends addressed are not only relevant to Australian museums but also to cultural organisations internationally who are all grappling with globalisation.RoutledgeSeptember 2018: 234x156: 192ppHb: 978-1-472-48574-8: £60.00eBook: 978-1-315-59711-9* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781472485748

Dummy text to keep placeholderPhilanthropy and Diversity at African AmericanMuseumsBlack RenaissancePatricia A. Banks, Mount Holyoke College, USASeries: Routledge Research in Museum StudiesPhilanthropy and Diversity at African American Museums is the first scholarly book to analyse contemporary African American museums from a multifaceted perspective. Whilst it puts a spotlight on the issues and challenges related to racial politics that black museums collectively face in the twenty-first century, it also shines a light on how they intersect with corporate culture, youth culture, and the broader art world. By turning the lens to the contemporary era, Banks throws light on the increasingly establishment side of African American museums and demonstrates how this contrasts with their grassroots foundations.

RoutledgeMarket: Museum StudiesNovember 2018: 234x156: 248ppHb: 978-0-815-34964-8: £115.00eBook: 978-1-351-16436-8* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780815349648

Dummy text to keep placeholderMuseums and RacismKylie Message, The Australian National UniversitySeries: Museums in FocusMuseums and Racism is a case-study focused examination of the broad themes of mobility and migration through a lens of current affairs and contemporary politics. Concerned with methodology, it investigates diverse disciplinary approaches to conducting research into the cultural politics of museums – the social and political landscape within which museums are located. The book’s interdisciplinary framework is drawn from ethnography and political science, as well as museum studies and activist art studies.RoutledgeMarket: Museum StudiesApril 2018: 216x138: 112ppHb: 978-1-138-24017-9: £45.00eBook: 978-1-315-29389-9* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138240179

Dummy text to keep placeholderMuseums and the Culture of CopiesEdited by Brita Brenna, University of Oslo, Norway, Hans Dam Christensen, University of Copenhagen, Denmark and Olav Hamran, The National Museum of Medicine, NorwaySeries: Routledge Research in Museum StudiesMuseums and the Culture of Copies aims to make the copying practices of museums visible and to discuss, from a range of interrelated perspectives, precisely what function copies fulfil in the heritage field and in museums today. With contributions from Europe and Canada, the book interrogates the meaning of copies and presents copying as a fully integrated part of museum work. Arguing that copying is at the basis of museum practice and that new technologies and practices have been taken up and developed in museums since their inception, the book presents both heritage work and copies in a new light.

RoutledgeMarket: Museum Studies & Heritage StudiesSeptember 2018: 234x156: 304ppHb: 978-0-815-36491-7: £115.00eBook: 978-1-351-10649-8* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780815364917

Dummy text to keep placeholderMuseums in a Culture of Human RightsNew Museums around the GlobeJennifer CarterFor several decades, museums have invested in the work of human rights. Museums dedicated to documenting abuses of human rights, such as acts of genocide, or significant advances in the field, such as in the achievement of civil rights, have proliferated since the 1980s, when a veritable museum boom occurred around the world. A newer phenomenon is that of institutions that choose to self-identify as human rights museums in their name. Very little research exists on these and this book aims to address that with an international and comparative analysis of the emergence and practices of several key human rights museums in North and South America, Europe, and Asia. The author analyzes case studies in Canada, Chile, Paraguay, Belgium, Japan, Taiwan, Korea, and Pakistan, with careful attention to locating these museums in their specific geo-political and cultural contexts. The book develops successful methods for knowledge sharing and mobilization amongst scholars & museum professionals.RoutledgeNovember 2018: 234x156: 224ppHb: 978-1-472-44117-1: £60.00eBook: 978-1-315-59651-8* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781472441171

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17MUSEUM & HERITAGE STUDIES

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Dummy text to keep placeholderDummy text to keep placeholderSnapshots of Museum ExperienceProfane EgyptologistsUnderstanding Child Visitors Through PhotographyThe Modern Revival of Ancient Egyptian ReligionElee Kirk and Will BuckinghamPaul Harrison

Series: UCL Institute of Archaeology Critical Cultural HeritageSeriesProfane Egyptologists is the first in-depth study of the now-globalphenomena of Kemeticism. It highlights key players in their ownwords, utilising extensive interviews, revealing a continuum ofbeliefs and practices spanning eight years of community growth.Profane Egyptologists will be of value to scholars and studentsof Egyptology, religion, phenomenology, and ethnography, aswell as Kemetics and devotees of Egyptian culture.

Routledge

Series: Routledge Research in Museum StudiesChildren are one of the major audiences for museums, but their visits are often seen solelyfrom the point of view of museum learning. In Snapshots of Museum Experience, WillBuckingham draws upon Elee Kirk’s research amongst child visitors to the Oxford UniversityMuseum of Natural History, to take a different approach. Using a method of photo-elicitationwith four- and five-year-old child visitors to the museum, the book investigates children’sexperience of the museum, and in the process undermines many of our assumptions aboutthe interests, needs and demands of child museum visitors.

RoutledgeMarket: Museum Studies & Heritage StudiesAugust 2018: 234x156: 240ppHb: 978-0-815-37986-7: £115.00eBook: 978-1-351-21406-3Market: Heritage Studies/Ancient Religion* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780815379867December 2017: 234x156: 230pp

Hb: 978-1-138-10299-6: £105.00eBook: 978-1-315-10332-7* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138102996

TEXTBOOK • READERDummy text to keep placeholderThe Contemporary MuseumPublic Art and Museums in Cultural DistrictsShaping Museums for the Global NowJ. Pedro Lorente, University of Zaragoza, Spain

Series: Routledge Research in Museum Studies Edited by Simon Knell, University of Leicester, UKPublic Art and Museums in Cultural Districts reviews the changing interactions betweenmuseums and public art in many different types of cities since the Enlightenment, or even

The Contemporary Museum adopts a presentist outlook that challenges the idea of themuseum as having been formed in the past, being controlled by its collections, following

before, going back to the etymological origins of museums and monuments in classical tradition, or being shaped to meet some future ideal. In doing so, the book recognises thatantiquity. Presenting for the first time an insight into the role of collections of public art as the actions of the museum must not be determined by professional or institutional creed,landmarks of cultural districts, this book considers collections displayed outdoors from thedouble perspective of curatorial outreach and civic values.

but by contemporary social need. A global contemporary lens is applied across the bookand contributors to the volume draw upon examples from around the world in order toprovide a consideration of global concern and, in turn, an egalitarian worldview.Routledge

Market: Museum and Heritage Studies RoutledgeMay 2018: 234x156: 272pp Market: Museum StudiesHb: 978-0-815-35957-9: £115.00 August 2018: 246x174: 344ppeBook: 978-1-351-12030-2 Hb: 978-0-815-36492-4: £115.00* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780815359579 Pb: 978-0-815-36493-1: £29.99

eBook: 978-0-815-36494-8* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780815364924

Dummy text to keep placeholderDummy text to keep placeholderThe Cultural Turn in International AidQueering the MuseumImpacts and Challenges for Heritage and the Creative IndustriesSullivan Nikki, Macquarie University, Australia and Craig Middleton, The Centre of

Democracy, South Australia Edited by Sophia Labadi, University of Kent, UKSeries: Museums in Focus Series: Routledge Studies in Culture and DevelopmentDrawing on their own curatorial practice, as well as their expertise in queer theory, theauthors of Queering the Museum develop a queer analysis of the ways in which museums

The Cultural Turn in International Aid is one of the first volumes to analyse a wide andcomprehensive range of issues related to culture and international aid. Assessing why

construct themselves, their core business, and their publics through the, often unconscious, international aid is provided for cultural projects, the book also considers whether and howdeployment of inherited rationalities. Providing a critique of both the practices and donor funded cultural projects can address global challenges, including post-conflictconventions associated with the modern public museum, and the ontological assumptions recovery, building peace and security, strengthening resilience, or promoting human rights.that inform them, Sullivan and Middleton consider recent discourse around inclusion inmuseums and explore the ways in which this has been taken up in practice.

With contributions from experts around the globe, this volume critically assesses the impactof international aid, including the diverse power relations and inequalities it creates, andthe interests it serves at international, national and local levels.Routledge

Market: Museum & Heritage StudiesRoutledge

November 2018: 216x138: 120ppMarket: Heritage and Culture

Hb: 978-0-815-35962-3: £45.00August 2018: 234x156: 256pp

eBook: 978-1-351-12018-0Hb: 978-0-815-38229-4: £115.00* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780815359623eBook: 978-1-351-20859-8* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780815382294

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MUSEUM & HERITAGE STUDIES18

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Dummy text to keep placeholderDummy text to keep placeholderThe Future of Natural History MuseumsThe Dignity of Heritage

Edited by Eric Dorfman, Carnegie Museum of NaturalHistory, USASeries: ICOM Advances in Museum ResearchIn the changing landscape natural history museums findthemselves The Future of Natural History Museums develops acohesive discourse that balances the disparate issues that theseinstitutions will face over the next twenty to fifty years. Thinkersfrom around the world, in a range of museums from the largestand most famous institutions to smaller and more nimble ones,focus on their specialisms, providing their unique perspectiveson a comprehensive range of issues. Disassembling the topicinto various key elements and, though commentary and

Michael Rowlands, University College, London, UK and Beverley Butler, UniversityCollege, London, UKThis volume makes a radical break with routinised accounts of cultural heritage. JacquesDerrida’s rallying call to ‘restore heritage to dignity’ is taken as an alternative guidingmetaphor by which this book critically re-visits the core question – what constitutes culturalheritage? It provides the intellectual impetus and critical framework by which culturalheritage discourse can undergo a process of radical reflection, fundamentalre-conceptualisation and engage in a subsequent reconstruction of its core values, practicesand ethics. It is of transformative value in outlining and creating new and future agendaswithin cultural heritage discourse.

RoutledgeMarket: Heritage Studies/Museum StudiesNovember 2018: 234x156: 224pp synthesis, the book charts a cohesive prediction for the direction of the natural history

museum sector.Hb: 978-0-415-51759-1: £85.00Pb: 978-0-415-51760-7: £24.99

Routledge* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415517591Market: Natural HistoryOctober 2017: 234x156: 248ppHb: 978-1-138-69264-0: £110.00Pb: 978-1-138-69263-3: £29.99eBook: 978-1-315-53189-2* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138692633

Dummy text to keep placeholderDummy text to keep placeholderThe Price of PatronageThe Disobedient MuseumCommerce, Culture and ExchangeWriting at the EdgeNicky RyanKylie Message, The Australian National University

Series: Museums in FocusDrawing on a range of cultural, theoretical, and politicalapproaches, Message examines potential links between methodsof critique today and moments of historical and disciplinarycrisis, and asks what contribution museums might make to these.Identifying the process of writing about museums as a form ofactivism, which brings together and elaborates on cultural andpolitical agendas for change, the book explores how a processof engaged critique might benefit museum studies, what thiscritique might look like, and how museum studies might makea contribution to discourses of social and political change.

Routledge

In the art world the relationships between private collections, public museums, commercialgalleries and auction houses have become increasingly complex. This book maps out andexamines this network by focusing on the practices of contemporary patronage. It showshow government and private interests have become more aligned, using art to widenaccess and build audiences. The juxtaposition of case studies from different sectors revealsthe increasingly important role that art plays in the global economy and the complexrelationship between cultural, economic and political interests that constitute contemporarynetworks of patronage.

RoutledgeMarket: Museum & Heritage StudiesDecember 2018: 234x156: 144ppHb: 978-1-409-45384-0: £95.00eBook: 978-1-315-55398-6

Market: Museum Studies * For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781409453840October 2017: 216x138: 116ppHb: 978-1-138-24011-7: £45.00eBook: 978-1-315-29413-1* For full contents and more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781138240117

Dummy text to keep placeholderDummy text to keep placeholderThe Routledge Handbook to MuseumCommunication

The Future of Museum and Gallery DesignPurpose, Process, PerceptionEdited by Suzanne Macleod, Jonathan A Hale, Tricia Austin and Oscar Ho Hing Kay Edited by Kirsten Drotner, University of Southern Denmark, Denmark, Vincent

Dziekan, Ross Parry and Kim Christian Schrøder, Roskilde University, DenmarkSeries: Museum MeaningsSeries: Routledge CompanionsThe Future of Museum and Gallery Design explores new research and practice in museum

design. Placing a specific emphasis on social responsibility, in its broadest sense, the book The Routledge Companion to Museum Communication reframes mediated museumcommunication as a resource for an inclusive understanding of current museumemphasises the need for a greater understanding of the impact of museum design in the

experiences of visitors, in the manifestation of the vision and values of museums and developments. Bringing together diverse strands within a single volume, chapters exploregalleries, and in the shaping of civic spaces for culture in our shared social world. The processes of communication that are shaped and shared through the application ofchapters included in the book propose a number of innovative approaches to museumdesign and museum-design research.

technologies such as print, radio, film, mobiles, computers and the internet. This inclusiveaim highlights the importance of mediated communication for the very notion of museumsand the practices of communication in relation to museum work and stresses the hugeRoutledge

Market: Museum & Heritage Studies intellectual, educational and practical benefits to be obtained from approaching the diversityMay 2018: 246x174: 376pp of research strands within museum studies from the perspective of mediated

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19MUSEUM & HERITAGE STUDIES

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Snapshots of Museum Experience .............................. 18Gender and Heritage ........................................................ 14A Spatial Humanities .............................................................. 9Strategies for Quantitative Research ........................... 8

Generative Systems Art .................................................... 14Global Social Archaeologies ............................................ 9

Active Collections ................................................................. 9

THAncient Crete .......................................................................... 3Ancient Egypt ......................................................................... 3Archaeological Theory: The Basics ................................ 8 Travellers in Time .................................................................. 6Heritage after Conflict ...................................................... 14Archaeologies of Rock Art ................................................. 3

VHeritage and Interpretation .......................................... 14Historical Archaeologies of Transhumance acrossEurope ....................................................................................... 4Historical Archaeology ....................................................... 9

Archaeology ............................................................................ 2Archaeology and Archaeological Information in theDigital Society ........................................................................ 8Archaeology of Art, The ...................................................... 2

Vikings, The .............................................................................. 6Violence and Power in Ancient Egypt .......................... 7Historicising Heritage and Emotions ......................... 14

IArchaeology of Early Roman Religion, The ............... 5Archaeology of Medieval Ireland, The ......................... 5Archaeology of Pacific Oceania ..................................... 2Archaeology of Portable Art, The ................................... 8

WWater and Society from Ancient Times to thePresent .................................................................................... 10

Iconoclasm and Later Prehistory ................................... 4Indian Ocean Trade in Antiquity, The .......................... 6Indigenous Communities and MuseumCollections ............................................................................. 14

BBranding the Global Guggenheim ............................. 11

World of Great Zimbabwe, The ...................................... 6World of the Oxus Civilization, The ............................... 6

Indigenous Museology .................................................... 15

C Intangible Heritage ........................................................... 15Intellectual Property, Cultural Property and IntangibleCultural Heritage ................................................................ 15

Carthage .................................................................................. 3 Iron Age Lives .......................................................................... 2Collecting and Conserving Net Art ............................. 11

MCollecting Computer-based Technology ................. 11Collecting the Past ............................................................. 11Conflict Archaeology .......................................................... 9 Marie Antoinette at Petit Trianon ............................... 15Conservation of 20th Century Furniture .................. 12 Mediterranean Timescapes .............................................. 4Contemporary Museum, The ........................................ 18 Multispecies Archaeology ................................................. 8Crossing the Human Threshold ...................................... 3 Museum and Gallery Studies ........................................ 15Cultural Diplomacy and the Heritage ofEmpire ..................................................................................... 12

Museum Basics ................................................................... 15Museum Development and CulturalRepresentation .................................................................... 16Cultural Heritage and the Future ................................ 12

Cultural Heritage Infrastructures in DigitalHumanities ........................................................................... 12

Museum Diplomacy in the Digital Age .................... 16Museum in Public, A ......................................................... 11

Cultural Heritage, Ethics and ContemporaryMigrations ............................................................................. 12

Museum Learning ............................................................. 16Museum Studies ................................................................. 16

Cultural Turn in International Aid, The ..................... 18 Museum Thresholds .......................................................... 16Cultures of the Countryside ........................................... 12 Museums and Indigenous Peoples ............................. 16Curating the Contemporary .......................................... 13 Museums and Racism ...................................................... 17Curatorial Activism ............................................................ 13 Museums and the Culture of Copies .......................... 17Curatorial Challenges ...................................................... 13 Museums in a Culture of Human Rights .................. 17Cycladic and Aegean Islands in Prehistory,The .............................................................................................. 5

Museums, Power, Knowledge ....................................... 17Must See! The Rise of the BlockbusterExhibition ............................................................................... 17Cádiz .......................................................................................... 3

D NDignity of Heritage, The ................................................... 19 Nasca World, The .................................................................. 6Disobedient Museum, The ............................................. 19

PDisplaced Things ................................................................ 13Dolmens in the Levant ....................................................... 9

E People of the Earth ............................................................... 2Philanthropy and Diversity at African AmericanMuseums ............................................................................... 17

Elamite World, The ............................................................... 5 Post-Conflict Archaeology and CulturalHeritage .................................................................................... 4Emotion, Affective Practices, and the Past in the

Present .................................................................................... 13 Price of Patronage, The .................................................... 19Emperor in the Byzantine World, The .......................... 5 Profane Egyptologists ...................................................... 18Ethnography of New Zealand’s National Museum,An .............................................................................................. 11

Public Art and Museums in CulturalDistricts ................................................................................... 18

Exhibitions as Research ................................................... 13

QExtremism, Ancient and Modern ................................... 4

F Queering the Museum ..................................................... 18

RFormative Britain .................................................................. 4Future of Museum and Gallery Design, The ........... 19Future of Natural History Museums, The ................. 19 Rock Art and the Wild Mind ............................................. 5

G Routledge Handbook to Museum Communication,The ............................................................................................ 19

S

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INDEX BY TITLE20

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Macleod, Suzanne ............................................................. 19A Maior-Barron, Denise ....................................................... 15Marchant, Alicia .................................................................. 14

Ambrose, Timothy ............................................................ 15 Mason, Rhiannon ............................................................... 15Antons, Christoph ............................................................. 15 Mason, Rhiannon ............................................................... 16Armit, Ian ................................................................................... 2 McCall, Grant S. ...................................................................... 8Ashley, Susan ........................................................................ 11 McCarthy, Conal ................................................................. 15

B McDermott, Catherine ................................................... 13Message, Kylie ...................................................................... 13Message, Kylie ...................................................................... 17

Banks, Patricia A. ................................................................. 17 Message, Kylie ...................................................................... 19Barry, Terry B. ........................................................................... 5 Mizoguchi, Koji ....................................................................... 9Benardou, Agiatis ............................................................... 12

NBennett, Tony ....................................................................... 17Berg, Ina ...................................................................................... 5Bestock, Laurel ....................................................................... 7 Newson, Paul .......................................................................... 4Bjerregaard, Peter .............................................................. 13 Nikki, Sullivan ........................................................................ 18Brenna, Brita .......................................................................... 17

PBurrows, Toby ...................................................................... 11

C Parry, Ross ............................................................................... 16Pikirayi, Innocent ................................................................... 6

Carson, Mike ............................................................................ 2 Pilaar Birch, Suzanne ........................................................... 8Carter, Jennifer .................................................................... 17 Pope, Matt ................................................................................. 3Carver, Martin .......................................................................... 4 Price, Neil ................................................................................... 6Chapman, Bob ....................................................................... 8

RChapman, Henry ................................................................... 4Cobb, Matthew Adam ....................................................... 6Cochrane, Andrew ............................................................... 2 Rowlands, Michael ............................................................ 19Colantoni, Elizabeth ............................................................ 5 Ryan, Nicky ............................................................................. 19Costello, Eugene ................................................................... 4

SCrooke, Elizabeth ............................................................... 14

D Scham, Sandra Arnold ....................................................... 4Schreiber, Katharina ............................................................ 6

Dekker, Annet ...................................................................... 11 Schubert-McArthur, Tanja ............................................ 11Dorfman, Eric ........................................................................ 19 Schuyler, Robert .................................................................... 9Driessen, Jan ............................................................................ 3 Scott, Cynthia ....................................................................... 12Drotner, Kirsten ................................................................... 19 Sekules, Veronica ............................................................... 12Dudley, Sandra H. .............................................................. 13 Smith, Laurajane ................................................................. 13Dunn, Stuart ............................................................................. 9 Smith, Laurajane ................................................................. 15

F Sulas, Federica ..................................................................... 10Sutton, Mark Q ....................................................................... 2Sweet, Jonathan ................................................................. 16

Fagan, Dr. Brian ...................................................................... 2

TFernández-Götz, Manuel ................................................. 9Foti, Petrina ............................................................................ 11Franco, Francesca .............................................................. 14 Tougher, Shaun ..................................................................... 5Fraser, James ........................................................................... 9 Troncoso, Andrés .................................................................. 3Fuglestvedt, Ingrid ............................................................... 5

VGVarutti, Marzia ...................................................................... 16

Grahn, Wera .......................................................................... 14

WGrincheva, Natalia ............................................................. 11Grincheva, Natalia ............................................................. 16

H Wallace, Saro ........................................................................... 6Watson, Sheila ..................................................................... 14Wood, Elizabeth .................................................................... 9

Hansen, Malene Vest ....................................................... 13 Álvarez-Mon, Javier ............................................................. 5Harrison, Paul ....................................................................... 18Hohenstein, Jill .................................................................... 16Holtorf, Cornelius ............................................................... 12Holtorf, Cornelius ............................................................... 12Horwood, Michelle ........................................................... 14Hoyos, Dexter ......................................................................... 3HUVILA, ISTO ........................................................................... 8

KKaner, Jake ............................................................................. 12Kemp, Barry .............................................................................. 3Kirk, Elee ................................................................................... 18Knell, Simon .......................................................................... 18

LLabadi, Sophia ..................................................................... 18Langley, Michelle .................................................................. 8Laurence, Ray .......................................................................... 4Lawrenson, Anna ............................................................... 17Lorente, J. ................................................................................ 18Lowe, Benedict ...................................................................... 3Lyonnet, Bertille ..................................................................... 6

M

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