Contents
Preface
Chapter 1. Craft Specialization and the Comparative Advantages of Gender - Sophia E. Kelly and Traci Ardren
Chapter 2. Political, Social, Economic, and Ideological Dimensions in the Late Pre-Hispanic Gendered Division of Labor on the North Coast of Peru - Cathy Lynne Costin
Chapter 3. Crafting Feminine Subjects: A Diachronic Interrogation of Gendered Production in the Andes - Pilar Margarita Hernández Escontrías
Chapter 4. The Artisans of Terminal Classic Xuenkal, Yucatan, Mexico: Gender and Craft during a Time of Economic Change - Traci Ardren, Alejandra Alonso Olvera, and T. Kam Manahan
Chapter 5. Gendered Labor in Pottery and Salt Production in Northeast Thailand - Alisha Halliwell, Andrea Yankowski, and Nigel Chang
Chapter 6. Complementary Crafts: The Dynamics of Multicraft Production in Banda, Ghana - Ann Brower Stahl
Chapter 7. Characterizing the Gendered Division of Labor within a Hohokam Specialized Economy - Sophia E. Kelly and James M. Heidke
Chapter 8. The Mobile Woman: Using Ethnoarchaeology to Build Models of Women’s Labor Contribution to Craft Production - Laura A. Swantek
Chapter 9. Observations on Invisible Producers: Engendering Pre-Columbian Maya Ceramic Production - Michael G. Callaghan
Chapter 10. Gender, Craft Production, and the State: Problems with “Workshops” - Brigitte Kovacevich
Chapter 11. From Warp and Weft to Spear and Spindle: Gender Identity and Textile Manufacture in Early Anglo-Saxon England - Sue Harrington
Chapter 12. A Comparative Perspective on Gender in Specialized Economies: Craft Specialization, Kinship, and Technology - Rita P. Wright
Contributors
Index