Archaeology of children is a relatively new field of research within archaeology. This article gives an overview of the advancement of the subject and discusses theoretical and methodological approaches applied to the study of children in the past, such as terminology and theory of childhood, and proposes an alternative approach to children and childhood. The many-faceted worlds of children and children’s material culture are reconsidered from the perspective of phenomenology. Nature-culture relationships and spatial dimensions in the archaeology of children are explained with long-term perspectives for archaeology.La arqueologia de la infancia es un campo de investigacion relativamente nuevo en nuestra disciplina. Este articulo pretende of...
Diplomsko delo skuša osvetliti otroke na arheoloških najdiščih v obdobju visokega in poznega srednje...
The last 40 years have seen an increase in outreach activities, many primarily targeted to children,...
The paper has four goals: to refute the claim that anthropologists have not studied childhood; to pr...
This article discusses the archaeology of children and childhood from a museum perspective with the ...
One assumption that persists in the field of archaeology is that it is easier to observe children wi...
The paper deals with the epistemological background of archaeology's conceptualisation of children's...
Theoretical engagement and methodological innovations geared towards identifying the presence and ac...
Theoretical engagement and methodological innovations geared towards identifying the presence and ac...
Children’s lives are important, both in their own right because childhood is a universally experien...
This article aims to provide an overview of some of the more important developments in the bioarchae...
In recent years the studies relating to the childhood in the past, the traces of children activity i...
This paper introduces a case study from Oslo, Norway, where two outreach programmes aimed at local c...
Research about children had been traditionally forgotten by the archaeology due to some factors as t...
Childhood is a core stage in development, essential in the acquisition of social, practical and cult...
This chapter addresses three interconnected topics, beginning with a short overview of the archaeolo...
Diplomsko delo skuša osvetliti otroke na arheoloških najdiščih v obdobju visokega in poznega srednje...
The last 40 years have seen an increase in outreach activities, many primarily targeted to children,...
The paper has four goals: to refute the claim that anthropologists have not studied childhood; to pr...
This article discusses the archaeology of children and childhood from a museum perspective with the ...
One assumption that persists in the field of archaeology is that it is easier to observe children wi...
The paper deals with the epistemological background of archaeology's conceptualisation of children's...
Theoretical engagement and methodological innovations geared towards identifying the presence and ac...
Theoretical engagement and methodological innovations geared towards identifying the presence and ac...
Children’s lives are important, both in their own right because childhood is a universally experien...
This article aims to provide an overview of some of the more important developments in the bioarchae...
In recent years the studies relating to the childhood in the past, the traces of children activity i...
This paper introduces a case study from Oslo, Norway, where two outreach programmes aimed at local c...
Research about children had been traditionally forgotten by the archaeology due to some factors as t...
Childhood is a core stage in development, essential in the acquisition of social, practical and cult...
This chapter addresses three interconnected topics, beginning with a short overview of the archaeolo...
Diplomsko delo skuša osvetliti otroke na arheoloških najdiščih v obdobju visokega in poznega srednje...
The last 40 years have seen an increase in outreach activities, many primarily targeted to children,...
The paper has four goals: to refute the claim that anthropologists have not studied childhood; to pr...