'Rock-art', 'Animism' and Two-way Thinking: Towards a Complementary Epistemology in the Understanding of Material Culture and 'Rock-art' of Hunting and Gathering People
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作者:
Porr, Martin
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Univ Western Australia, Sch Social & Cultural Studies, Archaeol Ctr Rock Art Studies, Crawley, WA 6009, AustraliaNgarinyin Bush Univ & Co Cultural Educ, Ballarat, Vic, Australia
Porr, Martin
[2
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Bell, Hannah Rachel
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Ngarinyin Bush Univ & Co Cultural Educ, Ballarat, Vic, AustraliaNgarinyin Bush Univ & Co Cultural Educ, Ballarat, Vic, Australia
Bell, Hannah Rachel
[1
]
机构:
[1] Ngarinyin Bush Univ & Co Cultural Educ, Ballarat, Vic, Australia
[2] Univ Western Australia, Sch Social & Cultural Studies, Archaeol Ctr Rock Art Studies, Crawley, WA 6009, Australia
In recent years, the concept of 'animism' has gained considerable popularity among archaeologists in exploring non-Western expressions of material culture. This development has also influenced recent academic approaches towards the study of 'rock-art' of people living as hunter and gatherers or in a hunting and gathering tradition. We argue here that attempts in this direction so far are generally compromised, because they fail to take Indigenous philosophies and intellectual contributions seriously. Any concern with Indigenous material expressions, including so-called rock-art, has to involve a critical re-assessment of academic discourse itself and a challenge to the primacy of Western scientific and literary, academic methodologies. With reference to the 'rock-art' and the world-view of the Ngarinyin (Kimberley, Northwest Australia), we present some preliminary thoughts for the development of an alternative interpretative framework, while offering a (much needed) legitimacy to another more balanced epistemology.