
A Painted Ridge: Rock art and performance in the Maclear District, Easte Cape Province, South Africa (Cambridge Monographs in African Archaeology)
by: David Mendel Witelson (Author)
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Publisher: Archaeopress Access Archaeology
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Publication date: 2019-07-31
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Language: English
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Print length: 164 pages
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ISBN-10: 178969244X
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ISBN-13: 9781789692440
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Book Description
A Painted Ridge is a book about the San (Bushmen) practice of rock painting. In it, David Witelson explores a suite of spatially close San rock painting sites in the Maclear District of South Africa’s Easte Cape Province. As a suite, the sites are remarkable because, despite their proximity to each other, they share pattes of similarity and simultaneous difference. They are a microcosm that reflects, in a broad sense, a trend found at other painted sites in South Africa. Rather than attempting to explain these pattes chiefly in terms of chronological breaks or cultural discontinuities, this book seeks to understand pattes of similarity and difference primarily in terms of the performative nature of San image-making. In doing so, the bygone and almost unrecorded practice of San rock art is considered relative to ethnographically well-documented and observed forms of San expressive culture. The approach in the book draws on concepts and terminology from the discipline of performance studies to characterise the San practice of image-making as well as to coordinate otherwise disparate ideas about that practice. It is a study that aims to explicate the nuances of what David Lewis-Williams called the ‘production and consumption’ of San rock art.Table of ContentsPREFACE CHAPTER 1: A PAINTED RIDGE CHAPTER 2: PERFORMANCE THEORY CHAPTER 3: DANCING AND PAINTING—A PERFORMATIVE DYAD? CHAPTER 4: BEHIND THE SCENES CHAPTER 5: PAINTED AND IMPLIED INTERACTIONS CHAPTER 6: SHELTERED PERFORMANCES CHAPTER 7: COMING TO TERMS WITH DIFFERENCES AND SIMILARITIES APPENDICES APPENDIX A: SITE MEASUREMENTS APPENDIX B: SCHEMATIC DIAGRAMS APPENDIX C: IMAGE COUNTS APPENDIX D: DIGITAL ENHANCEMENT PROCEDURES
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Editorial Reviews
A Painted Ridge is a book about the San (Bushmen) practice of rock painting. In it, David Witelson explores a suite of spatially close San rock painting sites in the Maclear District of South Africa’s Easte Cape Province. As a suite, the sites are remarkable because, despite their proximity to each other, they share pattes of similarity and simultaneous difference. They are a microcosm that reflects, in a broad sense, a trend found at other painted sites in South Africa. Rather than attempting to explain these pattes chiefly in terms of chronological breaks or cultural discontinuities, this book seeks to understand pattes of similarity and difference primarily in terms of the performative nature of San image-making. In doing so, the bygone and almost unrecorded practice of San rock art is considered relative to ethnographically well-documented and observed forms of San expressive culture. The approach in the book draws on concepts and terminology from the discipline of performance studies to characterise the San practice of image-making as well as to coordinate otherwise disparate ideas about that practice. It is a study that aims to explicate the nuances of what David Lewis-Williams called the ‘production and consumption’ of San rock art.Table of ContentsPREFACE CHAPTER 1: A PAINTED RIDGE CHAPTER 2: PERFORMANCE THEORY CHAPTER 3: DANCING AND PAINTING—A PERFORMATIVE DYAD? CHAPTER 4: BEHIND THE SCENES CHAPTER 5: PAINTED AND IMPLIED INTERACTIONS CHAPTER 6: SHELTERED PERFORMANCES CHAPTER 7: COMING TO TERMS WITH DIFFERENCES AND SIMILARITIES APPENDICES APPENDIX A: SITE MEASUREMENTS APPENDIX B: SCHEMATIC DIAGRAMS APPENDIX C: IMAGE COUNTS APPENDIX D: DIGITAL ENHANCEMENT PROCEDURES