Monuments in the Making: Raising the Great Dolmens in Early Neolithic Northern Europe

Monuments in the Making: Raising the Great Dolmens in Early Neolithic Northern Europe image
ISBN-10:

1911188437

ISBN-13:

9781911188438

Released: Sep 29, 2021
Publisher: Windgather Press
Format: Paperback, 328 pages
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Description:

Product Description
In this book we offer an exciting new perspective on a distinctive form of megalithic monument that is found across most areas of northern Europe. In order to achieve this we have abandoned outmoded typological classifications and reintroduced the term ‘dolmen’ to embrace a range of sites that share a common form of megalithic architecture: the elevation and display of a substantial stone. By critically assessing the traditionally assigned role of these monuments and their architecture as megalithic tombs, the presence of the dead is reassessed and argued to form part of a process generating vibrancy to the materiality of the dolmen. As such this book argues that the megalithic architecture identified as a dolmen is not a chambered tomb at all but instead is a qualitatively different form of monument. We also provide an entirely different conception of the utility of this extraordinary megalithic architecture – one that seeks to emphasize its building as articulating discourses of wonder as a broad social strategy. In this respect it is important to remember that many of these monuments were erected very early in the Neolithic and as a consequence of new people entering new lands, or social transformation. In short, dolmens are monumental constructions employing experimental and emergent technologies to raise huge stones, which, once built, enchant those who come within their spaces. Our claim is that dolmens were megalithic installations of affect, magical and extraordinary in construction and strategically positioned to induce both drama and awe in their encounter.\nTable of Contents\nAcknowledgments
List of figures
1. The enchantment of megalithic architecture: revisiting the dolmens of northern Europe
2. An aesthetic of megalithic construction: dolmens as installations of display
3. Becoming a capstone: differentiating stones and cup-marking in anticipation of dolmen construction
4. Raising dolmens
in-situ:
the deployment of enchanting technologies
5. Megalithic affect and effect: encountering dolmens in northern European landscapes
6. The living dolmen: flesh, stone and the flow and exchange of vital substances
7. A monumental catastrophe: investigating the collapsed dolmens at Garn Turne, south-west Wales
8. Wondrous places: dolmens and discourses of wonder in the early Neolithic of Britain and Ireland
Appendices
About the Author
Vicki Cummings is Reader in Archaeology in the School of Forensic and Applied Sciences, University of Central Lancashire where she specialises in the Mesolithic and Neolithic of Britain and Ireland, with a particular focus on monuments and landscape. She has a broader interest in hunting and gathering populations, interpretive archaeology and stone tools.\nColin Richards is Professor of World Prehistory in the Deaprtment of Archaeology at the University of Manchester where he mainly specialises in Neolithic archaeology, architecture and monumentality and ethnoarchaeology, with specific interests in Orkney and Easter Island.


























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