Resultado de búsqueda
Hawkes, Jacquetta (1910–1996)British archaeologist and writer who was one of the foremost popularizers of archaeology. Born Jacquetta Hopkins in Cambridge, England, on August 5, 1910; died on March 18, 1996; daughter of Sir Frederick Hopkins (a Nobel prizewinner); educated at Newnham College, University of Cambridge, and subsequently took part in many archaeological excavations between 1931 ...
9 de sept. de 2012 · Jacquetta Hawkes defined archaeology for the post-War generation. Central to the planning of the Festival of Britain, her films and her regular TV and radio appearances ensured she was a public ...
Jacquetta Hawkes (1910-1996) had an immensely rich and varied life, motivated by her passion for the distant past. She was a highly respected archaeologist, a writer of poems, plays and articles, a film-maker and broadcaster and peace campaigner. Her best-known work is probably "A Land" (1951), which fuses archaeology, literature, geology and ...
of Jacquetta Hawkes's heightened, cosmological sense of self, of her non-conformist, sensual, even primal, appreciation of geological processes in deep time, and through those, of a tale of human history configured according to a radical interpretation of the archaeological and landscape record.2
Ricerche. Jacquetta Hawkes è la prima donna a studiare archeologia e antropologia al Neunham College di Cambridge, a cui si diploma con lode. Nei suoi lavori sulla civiltà minoica ( Dawn of the Gods, 1968), Hawkes è una delle prime archeologhe a suggerire che questo popolo potrebbe essere stato governato da donne; l'idea era già stata ...
Jacquetta Hawkes has 80 books on Goodreads with 1834 ratings. Jacquetta Hawkes’s most popular book is A Land (Concord Library).
This short paper will discuss the role of the archaeologist and writer Jacquetta Hawkes as filmmaker. It is set within the context of her widely ranging work — from poetry and journalism to guide books and academic papers — which made varying contributions to the communication of archaeology from the 1930s to the 1980s