Bibtex export

 

@book{ Otto2006,
 title = {Warfare and society: archeology and social anthropological perspectives},
 editor = {Otto, Ton and Thrane, Henrik and Vandkilde, Helle},
 year = {2006},
 pages = {557},
 address = {Aarhus},
 publisher = {Aarhus Univ. Press},
 isbn = {87-7934-110-1},
 urn = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-318122},
 abstract = {While it may be overkill to say that studying war is hell, it is certainly problematic. To participants, war is chaos, death and boredom   and hence incommunicable. To scholars who do not know the smell of gunpowder, war is mediated by silent artefacts and layered discourse. They must muster compassion without letting it distort analysis. And despite entrenched traditions to the contrary, war cannot be comprehended in isolation from society.

To better understand the complex relationships between war and society, the two dozen contributors to this volume employ a broad variety of archaeological and anthropological tools, drawing where appropriate on history, political science and philosophy. The chapters are grouped under several heads, each prefaced by a helpful introduction. Topics include the theoretical conceptions of war in various disciplines; war in pre-state societies, and its relation to state formation; ritual war and mass graves; ancient weaponry and material culture; and warfare, discourse and identity. The examples range from ancient Fiji to contemporary Croatia, and from Gilgamesh to The Terminator.

The conundrum of war resists solution. But with a generous mix of theoretical argument and dramatic case study, Warfare and Society has something for anyone, academic or amateur, who would wrestle with it.},
 keywords = {Krieg; war; Kriegsführung; warfare; Archäologie; archaeology; Kulturanthropologie; cultural anthropology}}