Skocz do zawartości

Aktywacja nowych użytkowników
Zakazane produkcje

  • advertisement_alt
  • advertisement_alt
  • advertisement_alt
bookworm79

Economic Circularity in the Roman and Early Medieval Worlds New Perspectives on Invisible Agents and Dynamics

Rekomendowane odpowiedzi

07ed77457f929aebca54c0a051529403.webp
Free Download Economic Circularity in the Roman and Early Medieval Worlds: New Perspectives on Invisible Agents and Dynamics by Irene Bavuso, Guido Furlan, Emanuele E. Intagliata
English | December 18, 2023 | ISBN: 1789259967 | 232 pages | MOBI | 12 Mb
Develops and expands current research into the concept of economic circularity, whereby societies reduce waste by recycling, reusing, and repairing raw materials and finished products.

Economic circularity is the ability of a society to reduce waste by recycling, reusing, and repairing raw materials and finished products. This concept has gained momentum in academia, in part due to contemporary environmental concerns. Although the blurry conceptual boundaries of this term are open to a wide array of interpretations, the scholarly community generally perceives circular economy as a convenient umbrella definition that encompasses a vast array of regenerative and preservative processes.
Despite the recent surge of interest, economic circularity has not been fully addressed as a macrophenomenon by historical and archaeological studies. The limitations of data and the relatively new formulation of targeted research questions mean that several processes and agents involved in ancient circular economies are still invisible to the eye of modern scholarship. Examples include forms of curation, maintenance, and repair, which must have had an influence on the economic systems of premodern societies but are rarely accounted for. Moreover, the people behind these processes, such as collectors and scavengers, are rarely investigated and poorly understood. Even better-studied mechanisms, like reuse and recycling, are not explored to their full potential within the broader picture of ancient urban economies.
This volume stems from a conference held at Moesgaard Museum supported by the Carlsberg Foundation and the Centre for Urban Networks Evolutions (UrbNet) at Aarhus University. To enhance our understanding of circular economic processes, the contributions in this volume expand the framework of the discussion by exploring circular economy over the longue durée and by integrating an interdisciplinary perspective. Furthermore, the volume gives prominence to classes of material, processes, agents, and methodologies generally overlooked or ignored in modern scholarship.
Table of Contents
Introduction: approaching circular economies through archaeological and historical sources
I. Bavuso, G. Furlan, E.E. Intagliata, J. Steding
1. The ragpicker's dream: notes on the continuous role of junk dealers in the past urban economies back to the Roman period
Guido Furlan
2. Laws, Letters and Graves: the Organisation of Scavenging in the Early Medieval Period
Irene Bavuso
3. Exploring reuse in a prestige environment: the palace city of Samarra
Rhiannon Garth Jones
4. Through glass: recycling and reuse practices brought out by archaeometry and history
Line Van Wersch and Alexis Wilkin
5. Beauty, utility, value. Examples of glass reuses from the Roman period to the early Middle Ages
Cristina Boschetti
6. Identifying episodes of recycling in the archaeological record
Jonathan Wood
7. Textile reuse in the Roman naval contexts
Margarita Gleba and Maria Stella Busana
8. Functional, spiritual or aesthetic? - Investigating reuse in high-status 7th-century necklace pendants from Early medieval England
Rowan S. English
9. Stars aligned: tracking the use and reuse of Viking Age metal-casting models for star-shaped brooches through 3D visualisation
Derek Parrot
10. Seeking the invisible with legacy data. Notes on the use of archives for the study of ancient circular economies
Emanuele E. Intagliata
11. Evolutionary Design Processes in Thermal Architecture of the Roman Empire
Allyson McDavid
12. Reused columns in an ancient circular economy
Jon M. Frey
13. Mind the Gap: Researching Reuse Practices in Palmyra. The example of Reused Inscriptions
Julia Steding


Ukryta Zawartość

    Treść widoczna tylko dla użytkowników forum DarkSiders. Zaloguj się lub załóż darmowe konto na forum aby uzyskać dostęp bez limitów.

Links are Interchangeable - Single Extraction

Udostępnij tę odpowiedź


Odnośnik do odpowiedzi
Udostępnij na innych stronach

Dołącz do dyskusji

Możesz dodać zawartość już teraz a zarejestrować się później. Jeśli posiadasz już konto, zaloguj się aby dodać zawartość za jego pomocą.

Gość
Dodaj odpowiedź do tematu...

×   Wklejono zawartość z formatowaniem.   Usuń formatowanie

  Dozwolonych jest tylko 75 emoji.

×   Odnośnik został automatycznie osadzony.   Przywróć wyświetlanie jako odnośnik

×   Przywrócono poprzednią zawartość.   Wyczyść edytor

×   Nie możesz bezpośrednio wkleić grafiki. Dodaj lub załącz grafiki z adresu URL.

    • 1 Posts
    • 2 Views
    • 1 Posts
    • 2 Views
    • 1 Posts
    • 2 Views
    • 1 Posts
    • 4 Views
    • 1 Posts
    • 1 Views

×
×
  • Dodaj nową pozycję...

Powiadomienie o plikach cookie

Korzystając z tej witryny, wyrażasz zgodę na nasze Warunki użytkowania.