Episode 114
We Bet You'll Enjoy This Episode - Ep 114
This week, Anna and Amber have dealt you an excellent hand of examples of gambling, and the archaeology and anthropology thereof! Listeners, we hope you'll bear with us on this episode. We recorded on day three of the 2020 electoral vote counts, and we've both lost our minds. Come along on this ride with us as we explore what evidence we have for gambling in the archaeological record, and what we can learn from the types of games people play.
Links
- Gambling (Cambridge Encyclopedia of Anthropology)
- There’s no such thing as a natural-born gambler (The Conversation)
- Gambling Across Cultures: Mapping Worldwide Occurrence and Learning from Ethnographic Comparison (International Gambling Studies)
- Per Binde - On Gambling
- Deep Play: Notes on the Balinese Cockfight (The Interpretation of Cultures)
- When The Gambler Came To Chaco (American Archaeology)
- Sociopolitical, Ceremonial, and Economic Aspects of Gambling in Ancient North America: A Case Study of Chaco Canyon (American Antiquity)
- Visitors to Northern Australia: Debating the History of Indigenous Gambling (International Gambling Studies, via ResearchGate)
- Macassan History and Heritage (Australian National University)
- Where to gamble on the medieval Adriatic? (Medievalists.net)
- Queen Elizabeth I Held England’s First Official Lottery 450 Years Ago (Smithsonian)
- Shirley Jackson’s “The Lottery” (New Yorker)
- Gaming among Enslaved Africans in the Caribbean and its uses in Navigating Social Interactions (W&M ScholarWorks)
Contact
- Email the Dirt Podcast
Affiliates