The Angara Rock Art Style and the Emergence of Ethno-Cultural Identity
Author(s)
Ponomareva, Irina A
Tacon, Paul SC
Griffith University Author(s)
Year published
2019
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
This paper focuses on a stylistic analysis of depictions of elk in Siberian rock art in the Neolithic and Bronze Ages. The aim of this paper is to go beyond the cultural and chronological attributions of rock art and to try to understand why and through what processes changes in rock‐art style occurred. In order to answer these questions, the phenomena of ethnicity and ethno‐cultural identity are explored. Rock art is not considered as a passive reflection of past ethno‐cultural groups but rather as an active agent in structuring social identities.This paper focuses on a stylistic analysis of depictions of elk in Siberian rock art in the Neolithic and Bronze Ages. The aim of this paper is to go beyond the cultural and chronological attributions of rock art and to try to understand why and through what processes changes in rock‐art style occurred. In order to answer these questions, the phenomena of ethnicity and ethno‐cultural identity are explored. Rock art is not considered as a passive reflection of past ethno‐cultural groups but rather as an active agent in structuring social identities.
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Journal Title
OXFORD JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGY
Volume
38
Issue
1
Subject
Archaeology of Asia, Africa and the Americas
Archaeology not elsewhere classified