Artigo Revisado por pares

Reconsidering regional rock art styles: Exploring cultural and relational understandings in northern Australia’s Gulf country

2014; SAGE Publishing; Volume: 14; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1177/1469605314533260

ISSN

1741-2951

Autores

Liam M. Brady, John Bradley,

Tópico(s)

Archaeology and ancient environmental studies

Resumo

Archaeologists have frequently employed formal style-based approaches to identify regional rock art styles as a means to learning about social organization, territoriality, boundaries and interaction/communication. However, less attention has been devoted to interrogating the relational and cultural understandings of the motifs and sites subsumed under these broad regional style labels. In this article we focus on the complex social and cultural relationships tied to rock art at a regional level from northern Australia’s Gulf country to explore the association between a regional rock art style – the ‘Gulf style’ – and local Indigenous understandings of rock art. We argue that images from the southwest Gulf country are more than part of a regional rock art style – they are a part of an important network of ontological and epistemological encounters, which extends far beyond the rock wall in which they are encountered and into the realm of kinship, ceremony and Indigenous philosophical systems.

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