Narratives and Journeys in Rock Art: A Reader

Author:   George Nash (Associate Professor, Geosciences Centre, IPT (u. ID73 - FCT), Portugal) ,  Aron Mazel (Newcastle University / University of the Witwatersrand)
Publisher:   Archaeopress
ISBN:  

9781784915605


Pages:   702
Publication Date:   19 November 2018
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Narratives and Journeys in Rock Art: A Reader


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Overview

Why publish a Reader? Today, it is relatively easy and convenient to switch on your computer and download an academic paper. However, as many scholars have experienced, historic references are difficult to access. Moreover, some are now lost and are merely references in later papers. This can be frustrating. This book provides a series of papers from all over the world that extend as far back as the 1970s when rock art research was in its infancy. The papers presented in the Reader reflect the development in the various approaches that have influenced advancing scholarly research.

Full Product Details

Author:   George Nash (Associate Professor, Geosciences Centre, IPT (u. ID73 - FCT), Portugal) ,  Aron Mazel (Newcastle University / University of the Witwatersrand)
Publisher:   Archaeopress
Imprint:   Archaeopress Archaeology
Dimensions:   Width: 17.50cm , Height: 3.00cm , Length: 24.50cm
Weight:   1.717kg
ISBN:  

9781784915605


ISBN 10:   1784915602
Pages:   702
Publication Date:   19 November 2018
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

1. Seeing and Construing: The Making and `Meaning' of a Southern African Rock Art Motif - by J.D. Lewis-Williams; 2. An Introduction to the Problems of Southern African Rock Art Regions: The Rock Art of Bongani Mountain Lodge and its Environs - by Jamie Hampson, William Challis, Geoffrey Blundell and Conraad De Rosner; 3. Fluvial erosion of inscriptions and petroglyphs at Siega Verde, Spain - by Robert G. Bednarik; 4. The Location of Prehistoric Rock Art in North-East England: An Experimental Approach to Field Survey - by Richard Bradley, Tess Durden and Nigel Spencer; 5. Beyond Art and Between the Caves: Thinking About Context in the Interpretive Process - by Margaret W. Conkey; 6. Transculturation, Rock Art and Cross-Cultural Contact - by Thomas Heyd; 7. The Cultural Context of Hunter-Gatherer Rock Art - by Robert Layton; 8. Who Thought Rock Art Was About Archaeology? The Role of Prehistory in Algeria's Terror - by Jeremy Keenan; 9. The power of a place in understanding southern San rock engravings - by Janette Deacon; 10.Acoustic elements of (pre)historic rock art landscapes at the Fourth Nile Cataract - by Cornelia Kleinitz; 11. Unsettled times: shaded polychromes and the making of hunter-gatherer history in the southeastern mountains of southern Africa - by Aron D. Mazel; 12. Engraved in Place And Time: A Review of Variability in the Rock Art of the Northern Cape and Karoo - by David Morris; 13. Rock art and the material culture of Siberian and Central Asian shamanism - by Ekaterina Devlet; 14. Chronological Trends in Negev Rock Art: The Har Michia Petroglyphs as a Test Case - by Davida Eisenberg-Degen and Steven A. Rosen; 15. Making sense of obscure pictures from our own history: exotic images from Callan Park, Australia - by John Clegg; 16. Religious Spatial Behaviour: Why Space is Important to Religion - by Matthew Kelleher; 17. Bedrock notions and isochrestic choice: evidence for localised stylistic patterning in the engravings of the Sydney region - by Jo McDonald; 18. Rainbow Colour and Power among the Waanyi of Northwest Queensland - by Paul S. C. Tacon; 19. Caves as Landscapes - by Jean Clottes; 20. Landscape representations on boulders and menhirs in the Valcamonica-Valtellina area (Alps, Italy) - by Angelo Fossati; 21. Roaring Rocks: An Audio-Visual Perspective on Hunter-Gatherer Engravings in Northern Sweden and Scandinavia - by Joakim Goldhahn; 22. Rock Art and Archaeological Excavationin Campo Lameiro, Galicia: A new chronological proposal for the Atlantic rock art - by Manuel Santos Estevez and Yolanda Seoane Veiga; 23. The Shore Connection: Cognitive landscape and communication with rock carvings in northernmost Europe - by Knut Helskog; 24. Rock art as visual representation - or how to travel to Sweden without Christopher Tilley - by Liliana Janik; 25. A discovery of possible Upper Palaeolithic Parietal art in Cathole Cave, Gower Peninsula, South Wales - by George Nash, Peter van Calsteren, Louise Thomas and Michael J. Simms; 26. Images as Messages in Society: Prolegomena to the Study of Scandinavian Petroglyphs and Semiotics - by Jarl Nordbladh; 27. Approaches to Passage Tomb Art - by Muiris O'Sullivan; 28. Ritual Landscapes: Toward a Reinterpretation of Stone Age Rock Art in Trondelag, Norway - by Kalle Sognnes; 29. Excavation of a rock art site at Hunterheugh Crag, Northumberland - by Clive Waddington with Benjamin Johnson and Aron Mazel; 30. From natural settings to spiritual places in the Algonkian sacred landscape: an archaeological, ethnohistorical, and ethnographic analysis of Canadian Shield rockart sites - by Daniel Arsenault; 31. In Small Cupules Forgotten: Rock Markings, Archaeology, and Ethnography in The Deep South - by Johannes H. N. Loubser; 32. Shamanism, Natural Modeling and the Rock Art Hunter-Gatherers - by David S. Whitley; 33. Tsagiglalal, She Who Watches: Rock Art as an Interpretable Phenomenon - by James D. Keyser; 34. Rocks in the landscape: managing the Inka agricultural cycle - by Frank Meddens; 35. On-Site and post-site analysis of pictographs within the San Pedro Viejo de Pichasca rock shelter, Limari Valley, North-Central Chile - by Francisca Moya, Felipe Armstrong, Mara Basile, George Nash, Andres Troncoso and Francisco Vergara

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Author Information

GEORGE NASH is an Associate Professor at Geosciences Centre of Coimbra University (u. ID73-FCT), Polytechnic Institute of Tomar (IPT), Portugal. Dr Nash is a specialist in openair rock art and contemporary street art and has recently undertaken fieldwork and research in Andean Chile, the Negev Desert in southern Israel, central Portugal and Wales. | ARON MAZEL is a Reader in Heritage Studies at Newcastle University, United Kingdom. Dr Mazel has done extensive recording of rock art in the uKhahlamba-Drakensberg (South Africa) and Northumberland (United Kingdom).

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