Image-Makers
The Social Context of a Hunter-Gatherer Ritual
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:23rd May '19
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Explores the complex social relations of those who made hunter-gatherer rock art and why they made it.
Providing insight into an image-making process that became extinct at the end of the nineteenth-century, this book shows that, far from being trivial, hunter-gatherer rock art was embedded in religion. It explores the complex social relations of those who made rock art and why they made it.Rock art images around the world are often difficult for us to decipher as modern viewers. Based on authentic records of the beliefs, rituals and daily life of the nineteenth-century San peoples, and of those who still inhabit the Kalahari Desert, this book adopts a new approach to hunter-gatherer rock art by placing the process of image-making within the social framework of production. Lewis-Williams shows how the San used this imagery not simply to record hunts and the animals that they saw, but rather to sustain the social network and status of those who made them. By drawing on such rich and complex records, the book reveals specific, repeated features of hunter-gatherer imagery and allows us insight into social relations as if through the eyes of the San themselves.
ISBN: 9781108498210
Dimensions: 234mm x 156mm x 15mm
Weight: 490g
226 pages