A Companion to Rock Art

Blackwell Companions to Anthropology

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Bibliografische Daten
ISBN/EAN: 9781444334241
Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: 714 S.
Format (T/L/B): 4.1 x 25.5 x 18.5 cm
Auflage: 1. Auflage 2012
Einband: gebundenes Buch

Beschreibung

Rock art, both as art and as a record of human endeavor and artistry, evokes a personal response as well as a scientific one. Its geographic range is vast - with innumerable discoveries from the deserts of Australia to the limestone caves of the Pyrenees; from the heights of the Andes to the fjords of Scandinavia. The number and diversity of sites, and how we approach them using archaeological and art historical perspectives, provides a rich landscape of ideas and narrative frameworks. A Companion to Rock Art offers an unparalleled overview of a field that has evolved significantly within the last two decades. A range of interpretive frameworks within which petroglyph and pictograph art forms can be understood is examined in detail. This exciting field of enquiry continues to engage both researchers and the general public, with the search for elusive meanings in the images. Whether they were produced for the exchange of information; for secular or sacred purposes; for signaling alliance networks and identity; or as legacies of origin narratives are just some of the challenging questions that confront the modern archaeologist in understanding prehistoric and early humans. Leading international scholars provide the most up-to-date and comprehensive coverage of theoretical and methodological developments in the field, and illustrations and photographs ably support the text. This new companion is an authoritative guide for researchers, instructors, and students in anthropology, archaeology, religious studies, and prehistoric art.

Autorenportrait

InhaltsangabeList of Plates ix List of Figures xi List of Tables xvi Notes on Contributors xviii Foreword: Redefining the Mainstream with Rock Art xxix Margaret W. Conkey 1 Research Issues and New Directions: One Decade into the New Millennium 1 Jo McDonald and Peter Veth Part I Explanatory Frameworks: New Insights 15 2 Rock Art and Shamanism 17 J. David Lewis-Williams 3 Pictographs, Patterns, and Peyote in the Lower Pecos Canyonlands of Texas 34 Carolyn E. Boyd 4 Variation in Early Paintings and Engravings 51 Iain Davidson Part II Inscribed Landscapes 69 5 Rock Art and Seascapes 71 Ian J. McNiven and Liam M. Brady 6 The Social Dynamics of Aggregation and Dispersal in the Western Desert 90 Jo McDonald and Peter Veth 7 Rock Art and Transformed Landscapes in Puerto Rico 103 Michele H. Hayward and Michael A. Cinquino Part III Rock Art at the Regional Level 125 8 Megalithic Rock Art of the Mediterranean and Atlantic Seaboard Europe 127 George Nash 9 North American-Siberian Connections: Regional Rock Art Patterning Using Multivariate Statistics 143 Alice Tratebas 10 Southern Melanesian Rock Art: The New Caledonian Case 160 Christophe Sand 11 Rock Art Research in India: Historical Approaches and Recent Theoretical Directions 179 James Blinkhorn, Nicole Boivin, Paul S. C. Taçon, and Michael D. Petraglia Part IV Engendered Approaches 197 12 Engendering Rock Art 199 Kelley HaysGilpin 13 Pictures of Women: The Social Context of Australian Rock Art Production 214 Jo McDonald 14 Engendering North European Rock Art: Bodies and Cosmologies in Stone and Bronze Age Imagery 237 Joakim Goldhahn and Ingrid Fuglestvedt Part V Form, Style, and Aesthetics in Rock Art 261 15 Understanding Pleistocene Rock Art: An Hermeneutics of Meaning 263 Oscar Moro Abadía and Manuel R. González Morales 16 Rock "Art" and Art: Why Aesthetics Should Matter 276 Thomas Heyd 17 Recursive and Iterative Processes in Australian Rock Art: An Anthropological Perspective 294 Howard Morphy 18 A Theoretical Approach to Style in Levantine Rock Art 306 Inés Domingo Sanz Part VI Contextualizing Rock Art 323 19 Rock Art in Situ: Context and Content as Keys to Meaning 325 Linea Sundstrom 20 Symbolic Discontinuities: Rock Art and Social Changes across Time and Space 341 Maria Isabel Hernández Llosas 21 Parietal Art and Archaeological Context: Activities of the Magdalenians in the Cave of Tuc d'Audoubert, France 364 Robert Bégouën, Carole Fritz, and Gilles Tosello 22 Rock Art, Inherited Landscapes, and Human Populations in Southern Patagonia 381 Judith Charlin and Luis A. Borrero Part VII The Mediating Role of Rock Art 399 23 When Worlds Collide Quietly: Rock Art and the Mediation of Distance 401 Ursula K. Frederick 24 Picturing Change and Changing Pictures: Contact Period Rock Art of Australia 420 Paul S.C. Taçon, June Ross, Alistair Paterson, and Sally May Part VIII Rock Art, Identity, and Indigeneity 437 25 Rock Art, Identity, and Indigeneity 439 Robert Layton 26 Shamanism in Indigenous Context: Understanding Siberian Rock Art 455 Andrzej Rozwadowski 27 Rock Art, Aboriginal Culture, and Identity: The Wanjina Paintings of Northwest Australia 472 Valda Blundell and Donny Woolagoodja Part IX Rock Art Management and Interpretation 489 28 Rock Art and the UNESCO World Heritage List 491 Nuria Sanz 29 Safeguarding a Fragile Legacy: Managing uKhahlamba-Drakensberg Rock Art 515 Aron Mazel 30 Managing Rock Art Sites 532 Valerie Magar 31 From Discovery to Commoditization: Rock Art Management in Remote Australia 546 Peter Veth Part X Dating Rock Art: Technological Advances and Applications 563 32 Radiocarbon Dating of Rock Paintings: Incorporating Pictographs into the Archaeological Record 565 Karen L. Steelman and Marvin W. Rowe 33 Twelve Years of Research in Chauvet Cave: Methodology and Main Results 583 Jean Clottes and Jean-Mich

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