Historical biblical archaeology and the future : the new pragmatism /
editor Thomas E. Levy.
- 375 páginas : ilustraciones ; 25 centímetros
New trends in historical biblical archaeology -- The new pragmatism : integrating anthropological, digital, and historical biblical archaeologies -- Re-constructing biblical archaeology : towards an integration of archaeology and the Bible -- Future directions in the study of ethnicity in ancient Israel -- Biblical archaeology as social action in Israel : two case studies -- The archaeology of the levant in North America : the transformation of biblical and Syro-Palestinian archaeology -- Some applications -- Biblical archaeology and egyptology: old and Middle Kingdom perspective -- New perspectives on Levantine Mortuary ritual : a cognitive interpretive approach to the archaeology of death -- Under the shadow of the four-room house : biblical archaeology meets household archaeology in Israel -- The Philistines and their material culture in context : future directions of historical biblical archaeology for the study of cultural transmission -- Judha, Masos, and Hayil : the importance of etnohistory and oral traditions -- The four pillars of the Iron Age low Chronology -- From text to turf -- Texts in exile: Towards an Anthropological Methodology for incorporating texts and Archaeology -- Excavating the text of 1 Kings 9 : the gates of Solomon -- Culture, memory, and history : reflections on method in biblical studies -- Archaeology, the Bible, and history : the fall of the House of Omri and the origins of the Israelite state -- Integrating archaeology and texts : the example of the Qumran toilet -- In perspective -- Stones, bones, texts, and relevance or how I lost my fear of biblical archaeology and started enjoying it -- A Bible scholar in the City of David -- Books and stones and ancient Jewish history : a view from Camp David -- The archaeology of Palestine in the post-biblical periods : the intersection of text and artifact -- The changing place of biblical archaeology, exceptionalism or normal science -- Does biblical archaeology have a future?.