Martyn Lyons is an emeritus professor at the University of New South Wales in Australia. I am publishing many books and articles on the history of reading and writing in Europe and Australia. This includes the "History of Reading and Writing in the Western World" (Palgrave, 2010) and the "Culture Written by Ordinary European People", c.1860-c. 1920 (2013). He previously published four books to Palgrave Macmillan.
Rita Marquilhas is Associate Professor of General and Romantic Linguistics in the University of Lisbon in Portugal and is also the principal investigator of the post modern project - a digital archive of early modern Portuguese and Spanish general literature. She is the author of several articles on the social history of language.
Peter A. Jackson wrote numerous articles about the history of modern Thai culture, and in particular I am interested in religious, sexual and critical theoretical approaches to the cultural history of Southeast Asia. He currently holds the Discovery Grant of the Australian Research Council and participates in the "Traditional Thinking after Marxism in Thailand" project, "Thai Cultural Diversity and Diversity" at the Anthropology Center of Princess Maha and Chacristyrin in Bangkok He is a consultant for the project. His current book project is called "delicious and identity in Thai history"
Cultural History - an academic field that combines anthropological and historical methods to observe popular cultural traditions and cultural interpretations of historical experience. It examines historical knowledge, customs, and descriptions of artistic records and stories of groups of people. Culture - an academic discipline to study the power of daily human beings to build everyday life. It is aimed to understand the way in which meaning is created and communicated through practice, beliefs, and political, economic, or social structure in a particular culture.
Archeology studies humans through reasoning analysis of material culture and finally understands the general trends of daily life and the human history in past culture. Archaeological culture is an iterative collection of artifacts, usually not written, from a specific time and place. Later, these physical artifacts are used to infer the short-term aspects of culture and history. You can complement material culture studies by recent social, written history, verbal tradition, and direct observation.