Joanna Bruck
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Joanna Bruckanthropology Degrees
Anthropology
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Archeology
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Anthropology
Joanna Bruck's Degrees
- PhD Archaeology University of Oxford
Why Is Joanna Bruck Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Joanna Bruck is an archaeologist and academic, who is a specialist on Bronze Age Britain and Ireland. Since 2020, she has been Professor of Archaeology and Head of the School of Archaeology at University College Dublin. She was previously Professor of Archaeology at the University of Bristol between 2013 and 2020.
Joanna Bruck's Published Works
Published Works
- Ritual and rationality: some problems of interpretation in European archaeology (1999) (342)
- Experiencing the past? The development of a phenomenological archaeology in British prehistory (2005) (212)
- Material metaphors: The relational construction of identity in Early Bronze Age burials in Ireland and Britain (2004) (145)
- Fragmentation, personhood and the social construction of technology in Middle and Late Bronze Age Britain. (2006) (123)
- Houses, Lifecycles and Deposition on Middle Bronze Age Settlements in Southern England (1999) (118)
- A place for the dead: the role of human remains in Late Bronze Age Britain (1995) (89)
- Monuments, power and personhood in the British Neolithic (2001) (85)
- Bronze Age Landscapes: Tradition and Transformation (2002) (60)
- Body metaphors and technologies of transformation in the English Middle and Late Bronze Age. (2001) (56)
- Historical context and chronology of Bronze Age land enclosure on Dartmoor, UK (2008) (52)
- Material metaphors (2004) (50)
- Death, Exchange and Reproduction in the British Bronze Age (2006) (49)
- The Myth of the Chief: Prestige Goods, Power, and Personhood in the European Bronze Age (2013) (49)
- Settlement, landscape and social identity: The Early-Middle Bronze Age transition in Wessex, Sussex and the Thames Valley (2000) (48)
- What’s in a settlement? Domestic practice and residential mobility in Early Bronze Age southern England. (1999) (38)
- Aging Well: Treherne's ‘Warrior's Beauty’ Two Decades Later (2016) (38)
- In the footsteps of the ancestors: a review of Tilley’s ‘A phenomenology of landscape: places, paths and monuments’. (1998) (33)
- Women, death and social change in the British Bronze Age (2009) (33)
- The character of Late Bronze Age settlement in southern Britain. (2007) (28)
- Personifying Prehistory: Relational Ontologies in Bronze Age Britain and Ireland (2019) (23)
- Ancient DNA, kinship and relational identities in Bronze Age Britain (2021) (22)
- For an Ecology of Communication (1991) (22)
- Personifying Prehistory (2019) (22)
- Scotland in Ancient Europe. (2004) (19)
- Homing Instincts: Grounded Identities and Dividual Selves in the British Bronze Age (2005) (18)
- Ritual in Early Bronze Age Grave Goods: An Examination of Ritual and Dress Equipment from Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age Graves in England, by Ann Woodward and John Hunter (2016) (17)
- Making kin (2021) (15)
- Is archaeology still the project of nation states? An editorial comment (2016) (14)
- Death, exchange and reproduction in the British Bronze Age (2006) (13)
- Early Bronze Age burial practices in Scotland and beyond: differences and similarities. (2004) (13)
- Oxford handbook of the archaeology of ritual and religion (2011) (12)
- Death is not the end: radiocarbon and histo-taphonomic evidence for the curation and excarnation of human remains in Bronze Age Britain (2020) (12)
- Searching for the Chalcolithic: continuity and change in the Irish Final Neolithic/Early Bronze Age (2012) (11)
- From Aristotelean mimesis to ‘bourgeois’ realism (1982) (9)
- Ritual and Rationality: Some Problems of Interpretation in European Archaeology (1999) (9)
- Fire, earth, water: an elemental cosmography of the European Bronze Age (2011) (8)
- Introduction: themes for a critical archaeology of settlement. (1999) (8)
- Bronze Age Settlements (2013) (8)
- Women, Death and Social Change in the British Bronze Age (2009) (7)
- Tales from the Supplementary Information: Ancestry Change in Chalcolithic–Early Bronze Age Britain Was Gradual with Varied Kinship Organization (2021) (7)
- Excavations of Bronze Age field systems on Shovel Down, Dartmoor 2003 (2003) (7)
- Puritanic Rationalism: John Berger's Ways of Seeing and Media and Culture Studies (1991) (7)
- Landscapes of Desire: Parks, Colonialism, and Identity in Victorian and Edwardian Ireland (2013) (6)
- Landscape politics and colonial identities Sir Richard Colt Hoare's tour of Ireland, 1806 (2007) (6)
- Brecht's and Kluge's aesthetics of realism (1988) (5)
- Reanimating the dead: The circulation of human bone in the British Later Bronze Age (2017) (5)
- The early-middle Bronze Age transition in Wessex, Sussex and the Thames Valley (1997) (5)
- Prospects and potential in the archaeology of Bronze Age Britain (2008) (4)
- The Social Context of Technology (2020) (4)
- Encyclopedia of the Barbarian World. (2003) (4)
- Making 1916 : material and visual culture of the Easter Rising (2015) (4)
- Hoards, Fragmentation and Exchange in the European Bronze Age (2016) (4)
- Landscapes of Desire: Parks, Colonialism, and Identity in Victorian and Edwardian Ireland (2013) (4)
- Finding Objects, Making Persons: Fossils in British Early Bronze Age Burials (2018) (3)
- The architecture of routine life (2008) (3)
- The Social Role of Non-metal ‘Valuables’ in Late Bronze Age Britain (2018) (3)
- Gifts or Commodities?: Reconfiguring Bronze Age Exchange in Northwest Europe (2015) (3)
- The Value of Archaeology (2021) (3)
- Kinship: politics and practice (2021) (3)
- Gender and personhood in the European Bronze Age (2017) (3)
- The Power of Relics: The Curation of Human Bone in British Bronze Age Burials (2022) (3)
- Writing in the Electronic Age (1991) (3)
- Comment: Monuments, power and personhood in the British Neolithic (2001) (3)
- Houses, bodies, pots, quernstones: meaning and metaphor in the English Later Bronze Age. (2001) (2)
- Different types of dog at Roman Godmanchester. (2003) (2)
- The nature of the upper secondary fill in the outer ditch, trench B: the case for more rapid deposition and continued significance of the enclosure. (1999) (2)
- Landscape politics and colonial identities (2007) (2)
- ‘A good Irishman should blush every time he sees a penny’: Gender, nationalism and memory in Irish internment camp craftwork, 1916–1923 (2015) (2)
- Cremation, gender and concepts of the self in the British Early Bronze Age (2014) (2)
- The archaeology and genetics of human relationships (2021) (1)
- Approaching the material and visual culture of the 1916 Rising: An introduction (2015) (1)
- Social landscapes (2019) (1)
- The Ambivalent Dead: Curation, Excarnation and Complex Post-mortem Trajectories in Middle and Late Bronze Age Britain (2022) (1)
- Fire and the body (2014) (1)
- St Stephen’s Green and the trenches of the 1916 Rising (2014) (1)
- Beckett, Benjamin and the Modern Crisis in Communication (1982) (1)
- Nationalism, gender and memory: Internment camp craftwork, 1916-1923 (2015) (1)
- A comparison of Chancellorsland Site A with contemporary settlements in southern England (2008) (1)
- Fire, Earth, Water (2011) (1)
- The living house (2019) (0)
- Problems and practicalities in archive-based research. (1998) (0)
- Bronze Age Britain and Ireland. I (2003) (0)
- The power of relics: curating human bone in the British Bronze Age (2016) (0)
- The harmony of symbols: the Windmill Hill causewayed enclosure, Wiltshire. (1999) (0)
- Reviews - ALR No.75 1980 (1980) (0)
- Scottish Archaeological Research Framework Bronze Age Panel Report (2012) (0)
- Museums in the landscape: bridging the gap. (1998) (0)
- Introduction: settlement and ritual in later prehistory (2009) (0)
- Research Publications for the School of Archaeology (2008) (0)
- Review & Booknote: Beyond Superstructuralism: The Syntagmatic Side of Language (1995) (0)
- The British Chalcolithic: people, place and polity in the later third millennium (2012) (0)
- Negotiating internment: craftwork and prisoner experience, Ireland 1916-1923 (2014) (0)
- Radiocarbon and histo-taphonomic evidence for curation and excarnation of human remains in Bronze Age Britain (2019) (0)
- Other-than-human agency and personhood in archaeology (2017) (0)
- Women, Death and Social Change in the British Bronze Age Comments by Mark Hall (2010) (0)
- Introduction: Identity and alterity in Bronze Age Britain and Ireland (2019) (0)
- Conclusion: The flow of life in Bronze Age Britain and Ireland (2019) (0)
- Introduction to Peter Schneider (1982) (0)
- ‘A good Irishman should blush every time he sees a penny’: Gender, nationalism and memory in Irish internment camp craftwork, 1916–1923 (2015) (0)
- Object biographies (2019) (0)
- Material, virtual and temporal compositions: on the relationship between objects. (2001) (0)
- (2020). Radiocarbon and histo-taphonomic evidence for curation and excarnation of human remains in Bronze Age Britain. Antiquity, 94(377), 1186 - 1203. (2020) (0)
- Creating a research agenda for the Bronze Age in Britain (2008) (0)
- Landscapes of Desire: Parks, Colonialism, and Identity in Victorian and Edwardian Ireland (2013) (0)
- Fragmenting the body (2019) (0)
- Colouring the Past: The Significance of Colour in Archaeological Research. Andrew Jones , Gavin MacGregor (2003) (0)
- Review - Marxist Aesthetics (1985) (0)
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What Are Joanna Bruck's Academic Contributions?
Joanna Bruck is most known for their academic work in the field of anthropology. They are also known for their academic work in the fields of
Joanna Bruck has made the following academic contributions: