Material Mnemonics
Material Mnemonics
Everyday Memory in Prehistoric Europe
Author(s):
Katina T. LilliosVasileios Tsamis
Publication Date: 12 September, 2010
Available in all formats
Publisher: Oxbow Books
ISBN: 9781842177839
ISBN: 9781842177839
Price: INR 2374.99
Description
Table of contents
How did ancient Europeans materialise memory? Material Mnemonics: Everyday Practices in Prehistoric Europe provides a fresh approach to the archaeological study of memory. Drawing on case studies from the British Isles, Scandinavia, central Europe, Greece, Italy and the Iberian Peninsula that date from the Neolithic through the Iron Age, the book's authors explore the implications of our understanding of the past when memory and mnemonic practices are placed in the center of cultural analyses. They discuss monument building, personal adornment, relic-making, mortuary rituals, the burning of bodies and houses and the maintenance of domestic spaces and structures over long periods of time. Material Mnemonics engages with contemporary debates on the intersection of memory, identity, embodiment, and power and challenges archaeologists to consider how materiality both provokes and constrains the mnemonic processes in everyday life.
Description
How did ancient Europeans materialise memory? Material Mnemonics: Everyday Practices in Prehistoric Europe provides a fresh approach to the archaeological study of memory. Drawing on case studies from the British Isles, Scandinavia, central Europe, Greece, Italy and the Iberian Peninsula that date from the Neolithic through the Iron Age, the book's authors explore the implications of our understanding of the past when memory and mnemonic practices are placed in the center of cultural analyses. They discuss monument building, personal adornment, relic-making, mortuary rituals, the burning of bodies and houses and the maintenance of domestic spaces and structures over long periods of time. Material Mnemonics engages with contemporary debates on the intersection of memory, identity, embodiment, and power and challenges archaeologists to consider how materiality both provokes and constrains the mnemonic processes in everyday life.
Table of contents
- Cover Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- List of Contributors
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Natural substances, landscape forms, symbols and funerary monuments: Elements of cultural memory among the Neolithic and Copper Age societies of southern Spain
- 3. Mnemonic practices of the Iberian Neolithic: The production and use of the engraved slate plaque-relics
- 4. The art of memory: Personal ornaments in Copper Age South-East Italy
- 5. Burning matters: Memory, violence and monumentality in the British Neolithic
- 6. Layers of memory: An embodied approach to the Late Bronze Age of Central Macedonia, Greece
- 7. Memory, landscape, and body in Bronze Age Denmark
- 8. Memory maps: The mnemonics of central European Iron Age burial mounds
- 9. Memories of features, memories in finds. The remembrance of the past in Iron Age Scandinavia
- 10. Re-collecting the fragments: Archaeology as mnemonic practice