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Título
Wounded Animals and Where to Find Them. The Symbolism of Hunting in Palaeolithic Art
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Rock art
Portable art
Multivariate analysis
Upper Palaeolithic
Symbolism
Paleolithic art
Clasificación UNESCO
5504.05 Prehistoria
5505.01 Arqueología
5506.02 Historia del Arte
Fecha de publicación
2024
Resumen
Representations of wounded animals and humans in European Upper Palaeolithic art have traditionally been conceived as figures related to the hunting activities of hunter-gatherer societies. In this paper, we propose an analysis of Franco-Cantabrian figurative representations showing signs of violence between 35,000 and 13,000 cal. bp to qualify the interpretations of hunting and death in Palaeolithic art. To this end, both multivariate statistical analyses and hypothesis tests have been used to highlight the formal, thematic, chronological and regional similarities and differences in these types of artistic representations. The results show that wounded graphic units are mythograms coded by different variables that do not seem to reflect the actual hunting of the animal, but rather a more complex meaning. It was also discovered that, in early times, the artist preferred to wound secondary or less frequent animals, like deer. This changed in more recent times, when the main animals, such as bison, are wounded under greater normativity and homogeneity in the Pyrenees or the Cantabrian region.
URI
ISSN
0959-7743
DOI
10.1017/S0959774323000471
Aparece en las colecciones
- PREHUSAL. Artículos [127]
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