02531nam 2200553 a 450 991048030100332120170815165511.01-283-25999-0978661325999890-485-2157-2(CKB)2670000000114385(EBL)770951(OCoLC)751962337(SSID)ssj0000632954(PQKBManifestationID)12238280(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000632954(PQKBWorkID)10616141(PQKB)10181694(MiAaPQ)EBC770951(EXLCZ)99267000000011438520111105d2008 uy 0dutur|n|---|||||txtccrBuiten wonen in de Stad[electronic resource] de 'maakbaarheid' van IJburg /Tineke LupiAmsterdam Aksant20081 online resource (273 p.)Description based upon print version of record.90-5260-315-4 Includes bibliographical references.Buiten wonen in de stad; Inhoud; Voorwoord; deel i Onderzoeksopzet; deel ii Place making door professionals; deel iii Place making door bewoners; deel iv Confrontatie; deel v Pionieren in het nieuwe land; bijlage a S amenstelling bouwconsortia IJburg in de onderzoeksperiode; bijlage b Focusgroep van geïnterviewde professionals; LiteratuurAan de oostkant van Amsterdam verrijst IJburg, een stadswijk die bij de voltooiing zal bestaan uit zeven kunstmatig aangelegde eilanden. Vanaf de allereerste plannen is IJburg veelvuldig in het nieuws geweest en zijn de collectieve verwachtingen hoog gespannen. IJburg spreekt alom tot de verbeelding als stedelijke buitenwijk, het is buiten wonen in de stad. Dit roept de vraag op welke processen hier achter zitten? Wie en wat maken dat een nieuwbouwwijk als IJburg, die vaak verondersteld wordt saai en eenvormig te zijn, tot leven komt? En wat zegt dit over de betekenis die geografische plaats hArtificial islandsNetherlandsAmsterdamCity dwellersNetherlandsAmsterdamIJburg (Amsterdam, Netherlands)Electronic books.Artificial islandsCity dwellers301Lupi Tineke943881MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910480301003321Buiten wonen in de Stad2130645UNINA04213nam 22006375 450 991104908930332120260102120445.03-032-11846-810.1007/978-3-032-11846-2(CKB)44770003000041(MiAaPQ)EBC32470814(Au-PeEL)EBL32470814(DE-He213)978-3-032-11846-2(EXLCZ)994477000300004120260102d2025 u| 0engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierArchaeology: Historiography and Theory /by Tim Murray1st ed. 2025.Cham :Springer Nature Switzerland :Imprint: Springer,2025.1 online resource (444 pages)History Series3-032-11845-X Chapter 1. Introduction -- Chapter 2. Themes and Goals -- Chapter 3. Methodology and Structure -- Chapter 4. Some Aspects of Antiquarianism Before the Three Age System -- Chapter 5. Prehistoric Archaeology and the Development of Ethnology -- Chapter 6. The Consequences of High Human Antiquity -- Chapter 7. National and Ethnic Prehistory -- Chapter 8. Prehistoric Archaeology in the ‘Parliament of Science’ -- Chapter 9. Archaeology from 1960: Transformation, Continuity and Divergence -- Chapter 10. Expanding the Theoretical: Processual and Post-Processual Archaeologies 1960-1990 -- Chapter 11. Expanding the Empirical: Transforming Time, Process and Duration -- Chapter 12. Expanding the Significance of Social and Cultural Context -- Chapter 13. Archaeological Epistemology, Middle Range Theory, and the Prospect of Intractable Problems?- Chapter 14. Historiography and Archaeological Theory.This book examines our understanding of the ways in which we produce and consume archaeological knowledge and proposes that this should play a greater role in our attempts to describe and comprehend the nature and purpose of archaeology, and the nature of archaeological knowledge. During the past fifty years prehistoric archaeologists have sought to promote or oppose several redefinitions of archaeological goals and approaches that have emphasized, variously, the liberating or constraining power of critical self-reflection. While practitioners have continued to expand the storehouse of archaeological data, they have also been engaged in active investigation of archaeological goals and approaches, and in intensifying debate over what it is proper or relevant for practitioners to do. Prehistoric archaeology is now much more than a method of data collection and analysis which is transformed into culture history (or exemplifications of material culture theory) by the acts of comparison and interpretation. The central premise of this book is that the kind of understanding sought here should significantly improve our ability to work towards convincing solutions to many of the practical puzzles and problems with which we currently concern ourselves. The author also argues that this understanding will help to redefine the terms under which the collectivity of archaeological practitioners can be considered to be a functioning community.History SeriesHistoriographyHistoryMethodologyArchaeologyPhilosophyPhilosophical anthropologyScienceHistoryHistoriography and MethodTheoretical ArchaeologyPhilosophy of AnthropologyHistory of ScienceHistoriography.HistoryMethodology.ArchaeologyPhilosophy.Philosophical anthropology.ScienceHistory.Historiography and Method.Theoretical Archaeology.Philosophy of Anthropology.History of Science.907.2Murray Tim1060923MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9911049089303321Archaeology: Historiography and Theory4534387UNINA