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Visual Culture and Archaeology: Art and Social Life in Prehistoric South-East Italy
Contributor(s): Skeates, Robin (Author)
ISBN: 0715633902     ISBN-13: 9780715633908
Publisher: Bristol Classical Press
OUR PRICE:   $217.80  
Product Type: Hardcover
Published: December 2005
Qty:
Annotation: This book draws on the complementary fields of visual cultural studies and interpretative archaeology to examine how successive generations transformed their visual culture to construct themselves, exploring this process through an extended case-study of art and social life in prehistoric south-east Italy, between the Upper Palaeolithic and the Bronze Age. A central argument is that a wide range of visually communicative artworks were consumed and produced in the cultural process. Such objects range from portable artefacts, to installations within sites, to monumental structures in the landscape ??? all of which were interwoven with people??'s bodies in the experiences of daily life and special performances. More specifically, it is argued that these powerful aesthetic objects were actively used by people across space and time to perceive the world around them and to reproduce their social lives. They helped people to establish personal and collective boundaries, identities and relationships, to acquire and exercise power, to promote ideologies, and to contest them, especially at times of social tension.
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Social Science | Anthropology - Cultural & Social
- Social Science | Archaeology
Dewey: 306.470
Physical Information: 1.02" H x 6.48" W x 9.52" (1.26 lbs) 256 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

This book draws on the complementary fields of visual cultural studies and interpretative archaeology to examine how successive generations transformed their visual culture to construct themselves. It explores this process through an extended case-study of art and social life in prehistoric south-east Italy, between the Upper Palaeolithic and the Bronze Age. A central argument of the book is that a wide range of visually communicative artworks were consumed and produced in the cultural process. Such objects range from portable artefacts, to installations within sites, to monumental structures in the landscape - all of which were interwoven with people's bodies in the experiences of daily life and special performances. More specifically, it is argued that these powerful aesthetic objects were actively used by people across space and time to perceive the world around them and to reproduce their social lives. They helped people to establish personal and collective boundaries, identities and relationships, to acquire and exercise power, to promote ideologies, and to contest them, especially at time of social tension.


Contributor Bio(s): Skeates, Robin: - Robin Skeates is Reader in Archaeology at the University of Durham and author of Visual Culture and Archaeology: art and social life in prehistoric South-East Italy and Debating the Archaeological Heritage.