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Anthropology of Landscape, The: Perspectives on Place and Space


Anthropology of Landscape, The: Perspectives on Place and Space

Paperback by Hirsch, Eric (Lecturer in Social Anthropology, Lecturer in Social Anthropology, Brunel University); O'Hanlon, Michael (Assistant Keeper, Ethnography Department, Assistant Keeper, Ethnography Department, British Museum)

Anthropology of Landscape, The: Perspectives on Place and Space

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ISBN:
9780198280101
Publication Date:
29 Jun 1995
Language:
English
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Imprint:
Clarendon Press
Pages:
280 pages
Format:
Paperback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 8 May 2024
Anthropology of Landscape, The: Perspectives on Place and Space

Description

Landscape has long had a submerged presence within anthropology, both as a framing device which informs the way the anthropologist brings his or her study into "view", and as the meaning imputed by local people to their cultural and physical surroundings. A principal aim of this volume follows from these interconnected ways of considering landscape: the conventional, Western notion of "landscape" may be used as a productive point of departure from which to explore analogous ideas; local ideas can in turn reflexively be used to interrogate the Western construct. The Introduction argues that landscape should be conceptualized as a cultural process: a process located between place and space, foreground actuality and background potentiality, image and representation. In the chapters that follow, nine noted anthropologists and an art historian exemplify this approach, drawing on a diverse set of case studies. These range from an analysis of Indian calendar art to an account of Israeli nature tourism, and from the creation of a metropolitan "gaze" in nineteenth-century Paris to the soundscapes particular to the Papua New Guinean rainforests. The anthropological perspectives developed here are of cross-disciplinary relevance; geographers, art historians, and archaeologists will be no less interested than anthropologists in this re-envisaging of the notion of landscape.

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