The present book deals with the interrelationship between society and war seen through the analytical eyes of anthropologists and archaeologists. The opening quote – spoken by an informant to Torsten Kolind and published in his thesis about discursive practices in Bosnia just after the war in 1992-95 – captures the problems we face when we study war. Archaeologists and anthropologists alike rarely possess war experiences of their own: we study past and present wars, but remain total outsiders who depend on numerous and complex discursive layers – material, written, and spoken – to bring us insight on this subject, so demanding and so necessary to deal with
In the history of anthropology, that is, a science whose borders have considerably shifted, the obje...
The purpose of this article is to analyse institutionalised paralogisms, social and economic inequal...
This Issue presents American and West European anthropological perspectives on recenl events prior t...
The present book deals with the interrelationship between society and war seen through the analytica...
While it may be overkill to say that studying war is hell, it is certainly problematic. To participa...
Scholars writing about the 1990s wars in Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina became aware of some of the ...
It clearly takes a certain period to reflect on a singular experience in one\u27s life. In the May ...
In contrast to political science-based Peace and Conflict Studies, the multidisciplinary curriculum ...
The 1991-95 wars in the former Yugoslavia were dealt with by anthopologists and ethnologists as the ...
Anthropology on a warpath. Wars and ethnic conflicts as a challenge for a modern ethnologist Anthrop...
Besides extensive human suffering and immense material destruction, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on ...
This issue presents American and West European anthropological perspectives on recent events prior t...
Academic archaeology of the twentieth century has strangely ignored warfare and violence as relevant...
Anthropological approaches to warfare After the relative neglect of warfare and violence in anthropo...
In the history of anthropology, that is, a science whose borders have considerably shifted, the obje...
In the history of anthropology, that is, a science whose borders have considerably shifted, the obje...
The purpose of this article is to analyse institutionalised paralogisms, social and economic inequal...
This Issue presents American and West European anthropological perspectives on recenl events prior t...
The present book deals with the interrelationship between society and war seen through the analytica...
While it may be overkill to say that studying war is hell, it is certainly problematic. To participa...
Scholars writing about the 1990s wars in Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina became aware of some of the ...
It clearly takes a certain period to reflect on a singular experience in one\u27s life. In the May ...
In contrast to political science-based Peace and Conflict Studies, the multidisciplinary curriculum ...
The 1991-95 wars in the former Yugoslavia were dealt with by anthopologists and ethnologists as the ...
Anthropology on a warpath. Wars and ethnic conflicts as a challenge for a modern ethnologist Anthrop...
Besides extensive human suffering and immense material destruction, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on ...
This issue presents American and West European anthropological perspectives on recent events prior t...
Academic archaeology of the twentieth century has strangely ignored warfare and violence as relevant...
Anthropological approaches to warfare After the relative neglect of warfare and violence in anthropo...
In the history of anthropology, that is, a science whose borders have considerably shifted, the obje...
In the history of anthropology, that is, a science whose borders have considerably shifted, the obje...
The purpose of this article is to analyse institutionalised paralogisms, social and economic inequal...
This Issue presents American and West European anthropological perspectives on recenl events prior t...