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Transforming The Landscape Unknown

  • SKU: BELL-59421914
Transforming The Landscape Unknown
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

4.7

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Transforming The Landscape Unknown instant download after payment.

Publisher: Casemate Publishers & Book Distributors, LLC
File Extension: EPUB
File size: 57.25 MB
Author: Unknown
ISBN: 9781785706295, 1785706292
Language: English
Year: 2018

Product desciption

Transforming The Landscape Unknown by Unknown 9781785706295, 1785706292 instant download after payment.

This beautifully illustrated volume examines American Indian rock art across an expansive region of eastern North America during the Mississippian Period (post AD 900). Unlike portable cultural material, rock art provides in situ evidence of ritual activity that links ideology and place. The focus is on the widespread use of cosmograms depicted in Mississippian rock art imagery. This approach anchors broad distributional patterns of motifs and themes within a powerful framework for cultural interpretation, yielding new insights on ancient concepts of landscape, ceremonialism, and religion. It also provides a unified, comprehensive perspective on Mississippian symbolism. A selection of landscape cosmograms from various parts of North America and Europe taken from the ethnographic records are examined and an overview of American Indian cosmographic landscapes provided to illustrate their centrality to indigenous religious traditions across North America. Authors discuss what a cosmogram-based approach can teach us about people, places, and past environments and what it may reveal that more conventional approaches overlook. Geographical variations across the landscape, regional similarities, and derived meaning found in these data are described. The authors also consider the difficult subject of how to develop a more detailed chronology for eastern rock art
About the Author: George Sabo is Professor in the Department of Anthropology, University of Arkansas and Director of the Arkansas Archeological Survey. His research centers on human/environment relationships, expressive culture (art and ritual) among Southeastern Indians from pre-contact to modern times, American Indian interactions with European explorers and colonists in the Southeast, and the anthropology of history in modern Caddo, Osage and Quapaw communities in Oklahoma.
About the Author: Jan Simek is Professor in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Texas, Knoxville. his research interests include North American rock art, Palaeolithic and cave archaeology, human evolution, quantitative and spatial analysis and Southeastern archaeology.
About the Author: Carol Diaz-Granados is a Research associate in the Department of Anthropology, Washington University in St. Louis, specializing in the study of North American rock art and associated belief systems.

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