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Seals, Craft, and Community in Bronze Age Crete

Seals, Craft, and Community in Bronze Age Crete

Seals, Craft, and Community in Bronze Age Crete

Emily S. K. Anderson , The Johns Hopkins University
December 2016
Hardback
9781107131194

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    Generations of scholars have grappled with the origins of 'palace' society on Minoan Crete, seeking to explain when and how life on the island altered monumentally. Emily Anderson turns light on the moment just before the palaces, recognizing it as a remarkably vibrant phase of socio-cultural innovation. Exploring the role of craftspersons, travelers and powerful objects, she argues that social change resulted from creative work that forged connections at new scales and in novel ways. This study focuses on an extraordinary corpus of sealstones which have been excavated across Crete. Fashioned of imported ivory and engraved with images of dashing lions, these distinctive objects linked the identities of their distant owners. Anderson argues that it was the repeated but pioneering actions of such diverse figures, people and objects alike, that dramatically changed the shape of social life in the Aegean at the turn of the second millennium BCE.

    • Rethinks the nature of craft practice as a repetitive but powerfully innovative aspect of society
    • The innovative perspective on the glyptic makes a vital corpus of archaeological evidence newly relevant
    • Reconceives the process of social change, bringing fresh attention to everyday activities and background figures

    Product details

    December 2016
    Hardback
    9781107131194
    350 pages
    260 × 185 × 25 mm
    0.92kg
    63 b/w illus.
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • 1. Rethinking prepalatial Crete - social innovation on an island of persistence
    • 2. Identity and relation through early Cretan glyptic
    • 3. Distance and nearness - fundamental changes to the dynamics of seal use in late prepalatial Crete
    • 4. In the hands of the craftsperson - innovation and repetition across Cretan communities
    • 5. The crafting of new social space - relation and incorporation in late prepalatial Crete.
      Author
    • Emily S. K. Anderson , The Johns Hopkins University

      Emily S. K. Anderson teaches in the Departments of Classics and History of Art at The Johns Hopkins University, where her research primarily concerns the material and visual cultures of the Aegean and eastern Mediterranean Bronze Ages.