2016
DOI: 10.1007/s10816-016-9293-z
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Feeding the Community: Women’s Participation in Communal Celebrations, Western Sicily (Eighth–Sixth Centuries BC)

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Cited by 4 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Several of the authors dealing with material culture and practice address the persistence of binary and hierarchical concepts of agency, the body, and knowledge. Ferrer's (2016) paper counters the legacy of colonialist and androcentric narratives of first millennium BCE Sicily, which confined agency to certain actors and spheres in a hierarchically ordered binary structure-e.g., colonizer vs. colonized, elite vs. commoner, man vs. woman, ritual vs. domestic. Ferrer's analysis of items often ignored in traditional accounts of communal celebrations carried out in Sicilian acropoleis considers the agency of some women as well as the continuity between the political, ritual, and everyday.…”
Section: Normative:non-normative Tensions In Practice-the Containmentmentioning
confidence: 97%
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“…Several of the authors dealing with material culture and practice address the persistence of binary and hierarchical concepts of agency, the body, and knowledge. Ferrer's (2016) paper counters the legacy of colonialist and androcentric narratives of first millennium BCE Sicily, which confined agency to certain actors and spheres in a hierarchically ordered binary structure-e.g., colonizer vs. colonized, elite vs. commoner, man vs. woman, ritual vs. domestic. Ferrer's analysis of items often ignored in traditional accounts of communal celebrations carried out in Sicilian acropoleis considers the agency of some women as well as the continuity between the political, ritual, and everyday.…”
Section: Normative:non-normative Tensions In Practice-the Containmentmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Problematizing the androcentric narratives of man the toolmaker (Bird 1993;Gero 1991;Owen 2005: 37-39;Sassaman 1998), man the hunter (Doucette 2001;Brumbach2006a, b, 2009), and man the farmer (Robin 2002(Robin , 2006Watson and Kennedy 1991), various studies of the division of labor have demonstrated that task division does not inevitably align with sex or gender, potentially exhibiting complementary, non-dichotomous, fluid, or intersectional arrangements (Brumfiel and Robin 2008;Cobb 2005;Crass 2001: 109;Geller2008: 122-124, 2009aGero and Scattolin 2002;Hendon 2002;Hollimon 2000;Brumbach 2006a, b, 2009;Joyce 1992;Levy 2006;Preston-Werner 2008;Rotman 2006;Stockett 2005). Rather than hierarchizing contexts of action and domains of inquiry according to value-laden assumptions about gender, researchers are placing greater emphasis on how such spheres intersect in multidimensional and multiscalar ways (Cobb and Croucher 2016;Ferrer 2016;Spencer-Wood 2013).…”
Section: Destabilizing the Binary Binds: Approaches To Differencementioning
confidence: 99%
“…This structure was characterized by the development of strategically placed large nucleated hilltop settlements (as discussed by e.g. Ferrer 2016 , 903; Kolb 2007 , 177; Leighton 1999 , 227; Tusa 1999 ). Thus, a fully established indigenous population in the west had already developed a distinctive social and material culture by the time of the Phoenician settlement of Motya and subsequent establishment of a Greek colony at Selinous.…”
Section: The Archaeological and Environmental Contexts Of Western Sicmentioning
confidence: 99%