This article traces the genealogy of ‘materialism’ and thus material cultures’ research within geography and social sciences. Material culture is explained through the notion of historical materialism as a Marxist ideology, and its role within the culture. Subsequent usage of material cultures is explained against this original framework. Raymond Williams’ cultural materialism is explained through the work of geographers Stephen Daniels and Denis Cosgrove. The notion of the super-object is explored through examples from the nineteenth century; these are contrasted with Daniel Millers accounts of material cultures and those new theorizing of material cultures through notions of postcolonial cultures, waste, visual culture, and the body
open access articleThis article surveys the state of the field of material culture within the discip...
Tilley Chris, Keane Webb, Küchler Susanne, Rowlands Mike, Spyer Patricia (ads) Handbook of material...
The study of history currently witnesses two markedly different material turns. Some historians are ...
This article traces the genealogy of ‘materialism’ and thus material cultures’ research within geogr...
This article traces the genealogy of ‘materialism’ and thus material cultures’ research within geogr...
Th e point is sometimes made that, like language, material culture is a ubiquitous feature of human ...
Material culture and technoculture not only provide openings to study culture, but raise questions a...
Material Culture and (Forced) Migration argues that materiality is a fundamental dimension of migrat...
Geographers' engagements with materiality over the past decade have become the topic of widespread a...
The article discusses the ethnographic approaches to the study of material culture and the place th...
This article aimed to explain the use of historical materialism paradigms in socio-cultural studies....
While (historical) geographers are now increasingly engaging with material things and approaches, th...
The beginnings of modern material culture studies in anthropology are also the beginnings of modern ...
The aim of the article it to show the concept of «material culture» which is perceived somewhat ambi...
Scholars from a range of fields including archaeology, anthropology, sociology, geography, philosophy...
open access articleThis article surveys the state of the field of material culture within the discip...
Tilley Chris, Keane Webb, Küchler Susanne, Rowlands Mike, Spyer Patricia (ads) Handbook of material...
The study of history currently witnesses two markedly different material turns. Some historians are ...
This article traces the genealogy of ‘materialism’ and thus material cultures’ research within geogr...
This article traces the genealogy of ‘materialism’ and thus material cultures’ research within geogr...
Th e point is sometimes made that, like language, material culture is a ubiquitous feature of human ...
Material culture and technoculture not only provide openings to study culture, but raise questions a...
Material Culture and (Forced) Migration argues that materiality is a fundamental dimension of migrat...
Geographers' engagements with materiality over the past decade have become the topic of widespread a...
The article discusses the ethnographic approaches to the study of material culture and the place th...
This article aimed to explain the use of historical materialism paradigms in socio-cultural studies....
While (historical) geographers are now increasingly engaging with material things and approaches, th...
The beginnings of modern material culture studies in anthropology are also the beginnings of modern ...
The aim of the article it to show the concept of «material culture» which is perceived somewhat ambi...
Scholars from a range of fields including archaeology, anthropology, sociology, geography, philosophy...
open access articleThis article surveys the state of the field of material culture within the discip...
Tilley Chris, Keane Webb, Küchler Susanne, Rowlands Mike, Spyer Patricia (ads) Handbook of material...
The study of history currently witnesses two markedly different material turns. Some historians are ...