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Animal Iconography in the Archaeological Record: New Approaches, New Dimensions [Hardback]

  • Formāts: Hardback, 220 pages, height x width: 254x178 mm, weight: 4620 g, 114 colour and black and white figures
  • Izdošanas datums: 15-Nov-2021
  • Izdevniecība: Equinox Publishing Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1781799261
  • ISBN-13: 9781781799260
  • Hardback
  • Cena: 113,24 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 220 pages, height x width: 254x178 mm, weight: 4620 g, 114 colour and black and white figures
  • Izdošanas datums: 15-Nov-2021
  • Izdevniecība: Equinox Publishing Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1781799261
  • ISBN-13: 9781781799260
"This book is an important and exciting contribution to the study of human-animal relations. It should be of interest to anyone working on this topic and the interpretation of images - both modern and ancient"--

Animals pervade our lives, both today and in the past. From the smallest bug through pets and agricultural animals to elephants and blue whales, the animals themselves, animal-derived products and representations of animals can be found everywhere in our daily lives. This book focuses on the representations of animals in the past: How were animals represented in iconography, and how is the craftsperson interpreting animals within his or her own cultural context? What do the representations tell us about the role and function of both animals and the representations themselves? A series of papers explore these questions through images of animals. This is, for example, done by using technologies like 3D models to emphasize the dimensionality of objects, or through theoretical and interdisciplinary approaches that examine the intersection of the human and the animal. The papers challenge the notion of animals purely as objects, instead focusing on the many ways in which humans and animals interact. The importance of animals in all aspects of our lives means that the study of human-animal relations is an extremely relevant one both in the past and today. The papers take us on a journey through time and space, demonstrating exactly this relevance. Starting in the Neolithic and ending in the Medieval period, from the Mediterranean and Northern Europe through Siberia and the Baltic to the other side of the world in Australia, we have the privilege of encountering lions, horses, dogs, monkeys, birds, kangaroos and octopuses, among many other wonderful creatures. The book is an important and exciting contribution to the study of human-animal relations. It should be of interest to anyone working on this topic and the interpretation of images - both modern and ancient.

Recenzijas

"A young and fresh attempt to tackle a subject which has long stood in the shadow of the study and interpretation of anthropomorphic imagery." Professor Louis Nebelsick, Cardinal Stefan Wyszynski University, Warsaw

1 Introduction: The Third Dimension and Animal Iconography in Archaeology
1(6)
Laerke Recht
Katarzyna Zeman-Wisniewska
2 Zoomorphic Terracotta Figurines of the Halaf Culture, and New Evidence of Secondary Product Exploitation in 6th Millennium BC Northern Mesopotamia
7(15)
Nicola Scheyhing
3 Neolithic Vessels with Animal Characteristics: Modifications of Material as Negotiations of Clay Bodyscapes
22(20)
Evangelia Voulgah
4 The Minoan Monkey: Ties Between the Aegean and Indus River Valley via Mesopotamia
42(29)
Marie Nicole Pareja
5 How Many Tentacles? Octo-pus and X-pus in the Aegean Bronze Age: A New Archaeozoological Approach
71(20)
Lucia Alberti
Giambattista Bello
6 Bird-Shaped Vessels of Bronze Age Cyprus as Three-Dimensional Objects
91(12)
Katarzyna Zeman-Wisniewska
7 `Flying Gallop' Iconography and Its Representation in the Burial Rites of the Eurasian Bronze Age
103(11)
Emma Usmanova
Igor Chechushkov
Olga Gumirova
8 The Role of the Horse in Ancient Egypt: In Society and Imagery
114(15)
Lonneke Delpeut
9 Horns as Symbols in Bronze Age Scandinavian Southern Tradition Rock Art
129(24)
Joanna M. Lawrence
10 Lions and Other Animal Representations Found in Funerary Contexts in Archaic Macedonia
153(14)
Nathalie Del Socorro
11 Buckle Up! A Comparison of Ornamental Design on Pazyryk Riding Gear from the Sites Pazyryk-1, Berel'll and Ak-Alakha-3, with Regard to Supra-Regional Exchange during the 3rd Century BC
167(16)
Anna-Elisa Stumpel
12 Dogs of Roman Britain: Secular, Sacred or Consumed?
183(12)
Branka Franicevic
13 Dragons, Griffins and Leucrottas: Supernatural Creatures in the Eastern Baltic
195(16)
Tonno Jonuks
Index 211
Laerke Recht is an archaeologist at the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, University of Cambridge (Affiliated Scholar, former Marie Sklodowska-Curie Fellow). Katarzyna Zeman-Wisniewska is an archaeologist at the Institute of Archaeology, Cardinal Stefan Wyszynski University in Warsaw.