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Picturing the Bronze Age [Kõva köide]

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  • Formaat: Hardback, 232 pages, kõrgus x laius: 279x215 mm, fully colour illustrated
  • Sari: Swedish Rock Art Research Series 3
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Feb-2015
  • Kirjastus: Oxbow Books
  • ISBN-10: 1782978798
  • ISBN-13: 9781782978794
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 232 pages, kõrgus x laius: 279x215 mm, fully colour illustrated
  • Sari: Swedish Rock Art Research Series 3
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Feb-2015
  • Kirjastus: Oxbow Books
  • ISBN-10: 1782978798
  • ISBN-13: 9781782978794
Examines a wide range of Bronze Age images, bringing together the latest thinking from leading scholars on many aspects of their making and interpretation.

Pictures from the Bronze Age are numerous, vivid and complex. There is no other prehistoric period that has produced such a wide range of images spanning from rock art to figurines to decoration on bronzes and gold. Fifteen papers, with a geographical coverage from Scandinavia to the Iberian Peninsula, examine a wide range of topics reflecting the many forms and expressions of Bronze Age imagery encompassing important themes including religion, materiality, mobility, interaction, power and gender. Contributors explore specific elements of rock art in some detail such as the representation of the human form; images of manslaughter; and gender identities. The relationship between rock art imagery and its location on the one hand, and metalwork and networks of trade and exchange of both materials and ideas on the other, are considered. Modern and ancient perceptions of rock art are discussed, in particular the changing perceptions that have developed during almost 150 years of documented research. Picturing the Bronze Age is based on an international workshop with the same title held in Tanum, Sweden in October 2012.
List of contributors
vii
1 The Swedish Rock Art Research Archives and Picturing the Bronze Age - an introduction
1(4)
Johan Ling
Peter Skoglund
Ulf Bertilsson
2 From folk oddities and remarkable relics to scientific substratum: 135 years of changing perceptions on the rock carvings in Tanum, northern Bohuslan, Sweden
5(16)
Ulf Bertilsson
3 Hyper-masculinity and the construction of gender identities in the Bronze Age rock carvings of southern Sweden
21(16)
Lynne Bevan
4 Mixed media, mixed messages: religious transmission in Bronze Age Scandinavia
37(10)
Richard Bradley
5 Walking on the stones of years. Some remarks on the north-west Iberian rock art
47(18)
R. Fabregas Valcarce
C. Rodriguez-Rellan
6 A rock with a view: new perspectives on Danish rock art
65(14)
Louise Felding
7 Rock art and the alchemy of bronze. Metal and images in Early Bronze Age Scotland
79(10)
Andrew Meirion Jones
8 The `Stranger King' (bull) and rock art
89(16)
Johan Ling
Michael Rowlands
9 Trading images: exchange, transformation and identity in rock-art from Valcamonica between the Bronze Age and the Iron Age
105(16)
Alberto Marretta
10 Carl Georg Brunius: An early nineteenth-century pioneer in Swedish petroglyph research
121(8)
Jarl Nordbladh
11 Alpine and Scandinavian rock art in the Bronze Age: a common cultural matrix in a web of continental influences
129(14)
Umberto Sansoni
12 The maritime factor in the distribution of Bronze Age rock art in Galicia
143(12)
Manuel Santos-Estevez
Alejandro Guimil-Farina
13 Rock art as history -- representations of human images from an historical perspective
155(12)
Peter Skoglund
14 Sword-wielders and manslaughter. Recently discovered images on the rock carvings of Brastad, western Sweden
167
Andreas Toreld
Johan Ling is a researcher and lecturer at the Department of Archaeology and Ancient History in Gothenburg. His research interests are primarily in rock art, its chronology and landscapes, particularly the relationship between rock art and shore displacement in Bronze Age Sweden; and in the use of lead isotope analyses on bronze items to investigate the possibility of copper extraction in Sweden at that time. Peter Skoglund is a post-doctoral researcher at the University of Gothenburg. His main research interest is Scandinavian Bronze Age material culture, especially regional variations in material culture and the relationship between local material expressions and external influences, with particular reference to monuments, rock art and trees. His latest research involves the application of new dating evidence for the chronological and geographical framework of rock art in South and Central Sweden and its social and ritual significance. Ulf Bertilsson is a post-doctoral researcher at the University of Gothenburg with research interests in the interpretation of Bronze Age rock art and particularly its cosmological referents. He has been a key player in the establishment and development of the Swedish rock art archive held by the university.