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      Laughter, Humor, and the (Un)Making of Gender 

      Humor, Women, and Male Anxieties in Ancient Greek Visual Culture

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      Palgrave Macmillan US

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          “Traditional” women, “modern” water: Linking gender and commodification in Rajasthan, India

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            Rethinking Gossip and Scandal**I am grateful to the Center for Studies of Metropolitan Problems of the National Institute of Mental Health for support under grant no. 1 F31 MH 05088-01 for the research described in this chapter.

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              The Archaeology of Consumption

              A vast range of archaeological studies could be construed as studies of consumption, so it is perhaps surprising that relatively few archaeologists have defined their scholarly focus as consumption. This review examines how archaeology can produce a distinctive picture of consumption that remains largely unaddressed in the rich interdisciplinary consumer scholarship. Archaeological research provides concrete evidence of everyday materiality that is not available in most documentary records or ethnographic resources, thus offering an exceptionally powerful mechanism to examine complicated consumption tactics. In a broad archaeological and anthropological context, consumption studies reflect the ways consumers negotiate, accept, and resist goods' dominant meanings within rich social, global, historical, and cultural contexts.
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                Book Chapter
                2015
                : 163-189
                10.1057/9781137463654_10
                bd141a72-2dcb-4ce5-96bd-466f4aef2b61

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

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