A phenomenology of landscape: places, paths, and monumentsOffers a new approach to landscape perception. This book is an extended photographic essay about topographic features of the landscape. It integrates philosophical approaches to landscape perception with anthropological studies of the significance of the landscape in small-scale societies. This perspective is used to examine the relationship between prehistoric sites and their topographic settings. The author argues that the architecture of Neolithic stone tombs acts as a kind of camera lens focussing attention on landscape features such as rock outcrops, river valleys, mountain spurs in their immediate surroundings. These monuments played an active role in socializing the landscape and creating meaning in it. A Phenomenology of Landscape is unusual in that it links two types of publishing which have remained distinct in archaeology: books with atmospheric photographs of monuments with a minimum of text and no interpretation; and the academic text in which words provide a substitute for visual imagery. Attractively illustrated with many photographs and diagrams, it will appeal to anyone interested in prehistoric monuments and landscape as well as students and specialists in archaeology, anthropology and human geography. |
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Contents
Introduction | 1 |
The Social Construction of Landscape | 35 |
Subsistence Cultivators and the Land | 57 |
Copyright | |
5 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
A Phenomenology of Landscape: Places, Paths and Monuments Christopher Tilley No preview available - 1997 |
Common terms and phrases
Aboriginal aligned ancestral powers archaeological areas associated axes Barrett barrow on Gussage barrows on Cranborne becomes Black Mountains bones Bottlebush boundaries Bradley Caldey island Carn Ingli causewayed enclosures centre chalk chambered cairn chambers coast coastal constituted construction Cranborne Chase created cultural Cursus banks deposits distance distribution ditch dominant Dorset Cursus early Neolithic enclosure escarpment edge excavations Ffostyll flint scatters Gussage Cow Gwernvale Hambledon Hill human hunter-gatherers intervisible Koyukon land landscape later Mesolithic linked located long axis long barrows long cairns Mbuti meanings ment Mesolithic locales Mesolithic sites microlith monu monuments Morfa Bychan mound Mynydd Troed myth mythological natural northern barrow orientation Pembrokeshire Penbury Knoll Pentre Ifan perception relation relationship ridge ritual rock outcrops sacred Salisbury Plantation scape SE-NW significance situated slope social south-west Wales southern space spatial spur stone symbolic Tewa tion topography visible visual Yolngu