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2010 AP Student Awards

by eric — last modified March 30, 2010 11:36 AM

The Cotsen Institute of Archaeology is very pleased to announce the following awards won by Archaeology Program students over the past quarter:

  • Joseph (Seppi) Lehner won the 2010 Microscopy Society of America Presidential Student Award for his work (with Sergey Prikhodko) on the metals from the site of Kerkenes Dag, Turkey.
  • Yoko Nishimura (Ph.D. 2008) was awarded an American Council of Learned Societies New Faculty Fellowship for 2010-12.
  • Mac Marston received the Society for American Archaeology Student Paper Prize for 2010.

Congratulations to our award-winning students!

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The Construction of Value

Scholars from Aristotle to Marx and beyond have been fascinated by the question of what constitutes value. The Construction of Value in the Ancient World makes a significant contribution to this ongoing inquiry, bringing together in one comprehensive volume the perspectives of leading anthropologists, archaeologists, historians, linguists, philologists, and sociologists on how value was created, defined, and expressed in a number of ancient societies around the world. Based on the basic premise that value is a social construct defined by the cultural context in which it is situated, the volume explores four overarching but closely interrelated themes: place value, body value, object value, and number value. The questions raised and addressed are of central importance to archaeologists studying ancient civilizations: How can we understand the value that might have been accorded to materials, objects, people, places, and patterns of action by those who produced or used the things that compose the human material record? Taken as a whole, the contributions to this volume demonstrate how the concept of value lies at the intersection of individual and collective tastes, desires, sentiments, and attitudes that inform the ways people select, or give priority to, one thing over another.

Available now!

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