Jacquetta Hawkes (1910–1996)
Autor von Atlas of Ancient Archaeology
Über den Autor
Werke von Jacquetta Hawkes
The first great civilizations : life in Mesopotamia, the Indus Valley, and Egypt (1973) 95 Exemplare
Man on earth 11 Exemplare
The World of the Past-Volume One 1 Exemplar
Symbols and speculations 1 Exemplar
The world of the past 1 Exemplar
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Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society for 1935 — Mitwirkender — 1 Exemplar
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Wissenswertes
- Rechtmäßiger Name
- Hopkins, Jessie Jacquetta
- Andere Namen
- Hawkes, Jacquetta
- Geburtstag
- 1910-08-05
- Todestag
- 1996-03-18
- Geschlecht
- female
- Nationalität
- UK
- Geburtsort
- Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, England, UK
- Sterbeort
- Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, England
- Wohnorte
- Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, England, UK
Colchester, Essex, England, UK - Ausbildung
- University of Cambridge (Newnham College, Archaeology and Anthropology)
- Berufe
- archaeologist
historian - Beziehungen
- Hopkins, Sir Frederick Gowland (father)
Hawkes, Christopher (1st husband)
Hawkes, Nicolas (son)
Priestley, J. B. (2nd husband) - Organisationen
- Post-War Reconstruction Secretariat
Ministry of Education - Preise und Auszeichnungen
- Society of Antiquaries of London (Fellow)
- Kurzbiographie
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacquett...
Jacquetta Hawkes, née Hopkins, was the daughter of Sir Frederick Gowland Hopkins, a Nobel Prize-winning scientist. In 1933, she married Christopher Hawkes, an archeologist and professor, then an assistant keeper at the British Museum. She attended Cambridge University and became an archeologist and scholar and a prolific writer, producing academic papers, children's books, guidebooks, complex works on ancient Egypt, Minoan, and Mediterranean civilizations, poetry, plays, and a novel. She also appeared on television and radio. In 1953, after a divorce, she remarried to J. B. Priestley. With Hawkes, she co-authored Prehistoric Britain (1943). With Priestley, she wrote Dragon's Mouth (1952) and Journey Down a Rainbow (1955). She was also the author of History of Mankind: Cultural and Scientific Development, Volume 1, Part 1 (1963) under the auspices of UNESCO, and The Atlas of Early Man (1976). Her best known book was A Land (1951). See a biography of Jacquetta Hawkes in Her Brilliant Career by Rachel Cooke.
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When she eventually rises to the surface she examines the ways in which the qulaities of various rock strata have shaped human history and conversley the way humans have shaped the earth.
She is not a fan of concrete.
Hawkes develops notions of disconnection for more than half the book. There is an intelligence residing in stability that is constantly and relentlessly under threat.
By the 1950's, when this book was published, her world, her Britain, was being laid waste by a dystopian industrial era of complete disconnection that she glimpsed.
While she calls for the restoration of a mutilated Britain, she offers no practical way forward and instead draws together the threads of her narrative, back to her garden and to her place looking out from it. I couldn't help but wonder what she would have made of the communications revolution, the loss of language, identity, and the numbing sameness of thought that permeates the world today?
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