Handbuch Gender und Religion. Группа авторов
Tove (1994), Poles Apart. Have There Been any Male and Female Graves?, in: Current Swedish Archaeology 2, 141–148.
Janssen, Rosalind (2018), A New Reading of Shiphrah and Puah – Recovering their Voices, in: Feminist Theology 27/1, 9–25.
Janssen Rosalind M./Janssen, Jac. J. (1990), Growing Up in Ancient Egypt, London: Rubicon.
Joyce, Rosemary A. (2008), Ancient Bodies, Ancient Lives. Sex, Gender and Archaeology, London: Thames and Hudson.
Lim, Timothy H./Collins, John J. (2010), Introduction. Current Issues in Dead Sea Scrolls Research, in: Lim, Timothy H./Collins, John J. (Hg.), The Oxford Handbook of the Dead Sea Scrolls, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1–18.
Magness, Jodi (2002), The Archaeology of Qumran and the Dead Sea Scrolls, Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans.
Matić, Uroš/Jensen, Bo (2017), Archaeologies of Gender and Violence, Oxford: Oxbow.
Mazar, Amihai (2016), Discoveries from Tel Rehov. The Early Israelite Monarchy, in: Ziffer, Irit (Hg.), It is the Land of Honey. Discoveries from Tel Rehov, the Early Days of the Israelite Monarchy, Tel Aviv: Eretz Israel Museum, 9e–67e.
Meskell, Lynn M./Joyce, Rosemary A. (2003), Embodied Lives. Figuring Ancient Maya and Egyptian Experience, London: Routledge.
Meyers, Carol (1997), Recovering Objects, Re-Visioning Subjects. Archaeology and Feminist Biblical Study, in: Brenner, Athalya/Fontaine, Carole (Hg.), Reading the Bible. Approaches, Methods and Strategies, Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, 270–284.
— (2017), Seeing Double. Textual and Archaeological Images of Israelite Women, in: Sherwood, Yvonne (Hg.), The Bible as Feminism. Remapping the Field, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 514–533.
Moraw, Susanne (2017), Death and the Maiden. Late Antique Images of Nubile Females as Agents and Victims of Lethal Violence, in: Matić, Uroš/Jensen, Bo (Hg.), Archaeologies of Gender and Violence, Oxford: Oxbow, 151–178.
Nakhai, Beth Alpert (2014), Mother-and-Child Figurines in the Levant from the Late Bronze Age through the Persian Period, in: Spencer, John R./Mullins, Robert A./Brody, Aaron J. (Hg.), Material Culture Matters. Essays on the Archaeology of the Southern Levant in Honor of Seymour Gitin, 165–198.
— (2019), Women in Israelite Religion. The State of Research is All New Research, in: Religions 10/2, 122.
Nelson, Sarah Milledge (22004), Gender in Archaeology. Analyzing Power and Prestige, Walnut Creek (CA): AltaMira Press.
— (2006), Introduction. Archaeological Perspectives on Gender, in: Nelson, Sarah Milledge (Hg.), Handbook of Gender Archaeology, Oxford: AltaMira Press, 1–27.
— (2011), Gender and Religion in Archaeology, in: Insoll, Timothy (Hg.), The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 195–206.
Prentiss, Anna Marie (Hg.) (2016), Towards an Inclusive Queer Archaeology, The SAA Archaeological Record 16/1.
Rubin, Gayle (1997), The Traffic in Women. Notes on the »Political Economy« of sex, in: Nicholson, Linda (Hg.), The Second Wave. A Reader in Feminist Theory, London: Routledge, 27–62.
Samuel, Delwen (1999), Bread Making and Social Interactions at the Amarna Workmen’s Village, Egypt, in: World Archaeology 31/1, 121–144.
Schmidt, Robert A./Voss, Barbara L. (Hg.) (2000), Archaeologies of Sexualities, London: Routledge.
Sørensen, Marie Louise Stig (2000), Gender Archaeology, Cambridge: Polity Press.
Stavrakopoulou, Francesca (2010), »Popular« Religion and »Official« Religion. Practice, Perception, Portrayal, in: Stavrakopoulou, Francesca/Barton, John (Hg.), Religious Diversity in Ancient Israel and Judah, London: T&T Clark, 37–58.
Taylor, Joan E. (1999), The Cemeteries of Khirbet Qumran and Women’s Presence at the Site, in: Dead Sea Discoveries 6/3, 285–323.
Whitehouse, Laura M., The Weapons Make the Man? A Re-analysis of Early Anglo-Saxon Weapon Burial and Interpretation, in: Matić, Uroš/Jensen, Bo (Hg.), Archaeologies of Gender and Violence, Oxford: Oxbow, 223–246.
Internetquellen
Wikipedia, Dorothy Garrod: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dorothy_Garrod (aufgerufen am 22.09.2019).
Wikipedia, Sue Hamilton: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sue_Hamilton_(archaeologist) (aufgerufen am 22.09.2019).
Wikipedia: WikiProject Archaeology / Women in archaeology taskforce: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:WikiProject_Archaeology/Women_in_archaeology_task_force (aufgerufen am 21.09.2019).
Wikipedia, Women’s Classical Committee: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Women%27s_Classical_Committee (aufgerufen am 22.09.2019).
1 Dieser Artikel wurde vom Englischen ins Deutsche von Caterina Panunzio übersetzt. Die meisten direkten Zitate wurden ebenfalls aus dem Englischen übersetzt. Die Originalzitate wurden in die entsprechenden Fußnoten eingefügt.
2 Meskell/Joyce (2003), 4: »Archaeology offers a counter to the documentary and iconographic record produced by an all-male elite, in that it can shed light on the silent masses – women, children, foreigners, the non-elite and individuals of servile status.«
3 Meyers (2017), 519: »intertwined urban and male bias«.
4 Meskell/Joyce, (2003), 4: »hint at more subversive trends that explicitly defy the hegemony of the textual record«.
5 Gero/rev. Sørensen (2012), 594: »the investigation of the role and meanings of gender in the past«.
6 Matić/Jensen (2017), 2: »unexamined androcentric beliefs and gender mythologies and to demand arguments and evidence for them«.
7 Vgl. Rubin (1997).
8 Gero/rev. Sørensen (2012), 594: »of being made and remade«.
9 Gero/rev. Sørensen (2012), 595: »are articulated in the archaeological record«.
10 Vgl. Nelson (2006), 1–27.
11 Vgl. Bertelsen/Lillehammer/Næss (1983).
12 Vgl. Gero/Conkey (1991).
13 Bahn (1992), 321: »The latest outbreak – which bears a great resemblance to the good old days of New Archaeology (primarily a racket for the boys) – is gender archaeology which is actually feminist archaeology (a new racket for the girls). […] Hardly a month goes by without another conference on ›gender archaeology‹ being held somewhere by a host of female archaeologists (plus a few brave or trendy males who aspire to political correctness). Some of its aims are laudable, but the bandwagon shouldn’t be allowed to roll too far, as the new archaeology did, before the empresses’ lack of clothes is pointed out by gleeful cynics.«
14 Vgl. Gilchrist (1999); Joyce (2008).
15 Vgl. Hamilton/Whitehouse/Wright (2007), in Anlehnung an Díaz-Andreu/Sørensen (1998) im Bereich Europäische Archäologie.
16 Vgl. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:WikiProject_Archaeology/Women_in_archaeology_task_force
17 Vgl. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dorothy_Garrod; https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sue_Hamilton_