Barbara Bender | |
---|---|
Academic work | |
Institutions | UCL |
Barbara Bender is an anthropologist and archaeologist. She is currently Emeritus Professor of Heritage Anthropology at University College London. [1]
Bender studied for a PhD on the Neolithic of Northern France at the Institute of Archaeology, London. [2] From 1967-68 she was assistant professor at the University of Illinois, Chicago. [3] In 1972 Bender was a Lecturer in the Department of Extra-Mural Studies of London University. [3] Her first monograph Farming in Prehistory, published in 1975, was described as a 'painstaking compilation' of archaeological evidence on the development of agriculture. [4]
Later she moved to the Department of Anthropology, UCL, being one of several material-culture focused anthropologists within the department in the late 1970s and early 1980s alongside Daniel Miller and John Gledhill. [5] Bender's later work utilised a phenomenological approach to landscape, collaborating with Sue Hamilton and Christopher Tilley. In the late 1990s, Bender, Hamilton and Tilley developed a landscape research project, with the support of UCL students, that focused on the Bronze Age settlement and stone circle at Leskernick on Bodmin Moor. [6] [7] Bender's study of Stonehenge is considered a seminal work in considering archaeological sites as historically dynamic, with numerous stakeholders. [8]
Barbara Bender | |
---|---|
Academic work | |
Institutions | UCL |
Barbara Bender is an anthropologist and archaeologist. She is currently Emeritus Professor of Heritage Anthropology at University College London. [1]
Bender studied for a PhD on the Neolithic of Northern France at the Institute of Archaeology, London. [2] From 1967-68 she was assistant professor at the University of Illinois, Chicago. [3] In 1972 Bender was a Lecturer in the Department of Extra-Mural Studies of London University. [3] Her first monograph Farming in Prehistory, published in 1975, was described as a 'painstaking compilation' of archaeological evidence on the development of agriculture. [4]
Later she moved to the Department of Anthropology, UCL, being one of several material-culture focused anthropologists within the department in the late 1970s and early 1980s alongside Daniel Miller and John Gledhill. [5] Bender's later work utilised a phenomenological approach to landscape, collaborating with Sue Hamilton and Christopher Tilley. In the late 1990s, Bender, Hamilton and Tilley developed a landscape research project, with the support of UCL students, that focused on the Bronze Age settlement and stone circle at Leskernick on Bodmin Moor. [6] [7] Bender's study of Stonehenge is considered a seminal work in considering archaeological sites as historically dynamic, with numerous stakeholders. [8]