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Colouring the Past: The Significance of Colour in Archaeological Research [Mīkstie vāki]

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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 276 pages, height x width x depth: 232x154x12 mm, 50 illus, 8pp colour section, biblio, index
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Jul-2002
  • Izdevniecība: Berg Publishers
  • ISBN-10: 1859735479
  • ISBN-13: 9781859735473
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 276 pages, height x width x depth: 232x154x12 mm, 50 illus, 8pp colour section, biblio, index
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Jul-2002
  • Izdevniecība: Berg Publishers
  • ISBN-10: 1859735479
  • ISBN-13: 9781859735473
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
Colour shapes our world in profound, if sometimes subtle, ways. It helps us to classify, form opinions, and make aesthetic and emotional judgements. Colour operates in every culture as a symbol, a metaphor, and as part of an aesthetic system. Yet archaeologists have traditionally subordinated the study of colour to the form and material value of the objects they find and thereby overlook its impact on conceptual systems throughout human history.

This book explores the means by which colour-based cultural understandings are formed, and how they are used to sustain or alter social relations. From colour systems in the Mesolithic, to Mesoamerican symbolism and the use of colour in Roman Pompeii, this book paints a new picture of the past. Through their close observation of monuments and material culture, authors uncover the subtle role colour has played in the construction of past social identities and the expression of ancient beliefs. Providing an original contribution to our understanding of past worlds of meaning, this book will be essential reading for archaeologists, anthropologists and historians, as well as anyone with an interest in material culture, art and aesthetics.

Recenzijas

'Until recently archaeologists were remarkably insensitive to the importance of colour in ancient societies. This book changes the situation. It offers a series of provocative and persuasive studies which will surely influence a new generation of research. It will help to stimulate a more imaginative approach to fieldwork and richerinterpretations of the past. All archaeologists should read it and learn from what it has to say.'Richard Bradley, Reading University

Papildus informācija

Also available in hardback, 9781859735428 GBP55.00 (July, 2002)
Preface Introduction: Wonderful things: colour studies in archaeology
from Munsell to materiality Andrew Jones and Gavin MacGregor
1.
Apotropaism and the temporality of colours: colourful Mesolithic-Neolithic
seasons in the Danube Gorges Dusan Boric
2. Colourful prehistories: the
problem with the Berlin and Kay colour paradigm John Chapman
3. White on
blonde: quartz pebbles and the use of quartz at Neolithic monuments in the
Isle of Man and beyond Timothy Darvill
4. So many shades of rock: colour
symbolism and Irish stone axeheads Gabriel Cooney
5. The Flashing Blade:
copper, colour and luminosity in north Italian Copper Age society Stephen
Keates
6. Munselling the Mound: the use of soil colour as metaphor in
British Bronze Age Funerary ritual Mary-Ann Owoc
7. Making monuments out
of mountains: the role of colour and texture in the constitution of meaning
and identity at Recumbent Stone Circles Gavin MacGregor
8. A biography of
colour: colour, material histories and personhood in the Early Bronze Age of
Britain and Ireland Andrew Jones
9. The composition, function and
significance of the mineral paints from the Kurgan burial mounds of the South
Urals and North Kazakhstan Alexander Tairov and A. F Bushamakin
10. Colour
and light in a Pompeian house: modern impressions or ancient perceptions
Penelope M. Allison
11. The colours of light: materiality and chromatic
cultures of the Americas Nicholas J. Saunders
12. Epilogue: colour and
materiality in prehistoric society Chris Scarre NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS
Penelope M. Allison has taught ancient history and archaeology at the
University of Sydney (Australia), the Australian National University and the
University of Sheffield (UK). She has held research fellowships at the
University of Sydney (Australia) and in the Faculty of Classics, Cambridge
(UK). She is currently an Australian Research Council Queen Elizabeth II
Fellow at the Australian National University. She has recently edited The
Archaeology of Household Activities (Routledge 1999) and co-authored Casa
della Caccia Antica, for the series Hauser in Pompeji (Hirmer, Munich) and
authored Pompeian Households (The Cotsen Institute of Archaeology at UCLA).
Dusan Boric is currently completing his doctoral research on the topic of
'Mesolithic-Neolithic time views: seasons and life cycles in the Balkans, c.
9000-5500 BC ' in the Department of Archaeology, University of Cambridge
(UK). His current research focuses on the Early Holocene archaeological
sequences of the Danube Gorges of Serbia and the sites of Lepenski Vir,
Padina, Vlasac and Hajducka Vodenica with an emphasis on subsistence
practices, mortuary data and domestic architecture. He is interested in
exploring theoretical aspects of archaeological inquiry that can contribute
to the wider field of social theory. These include questions of apotropaism,
temporality and the political nature of archaeological practice. The late
Anatoli Filippovich Bushmakin worked at the Institute of Mineralogy, Urals
Branch of the Russian Academy of Science (Russia) in collaboration with
Alexander Tairov. Gabriel Cooney is a Professor in the Department of
Archaeology, University College Dublin (Ireland). He is the author of
numerous articles on the Irish Neolithic, landscape archaeology and
archaeological theory. He recently published 'Landscapes of Neolithic
Ireland' (Routledge, 2000). John Chapman is a Reader in Archaeology in the
University of Durham (UK) with research interests in archaeological theory,
settlement, mortuary studies and social structure. He has worked for over 30
years with the Mesolithic, Neolithic and Copper Age of Central and Eastern
Europe. He recently published a ground-breaking book 'Fragmentation in
archaeology' (Routledge, 2000). His late
Andrew Jones Lecturer in Archaeology,University of Southampton Gavin MacGregor Project Officer, Archaeological Research Division, University of Glasgow