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Own and Be Owned: Archaeological Approaches to the Concept of Possession PDF

242 Pages·2015·20.932 MB·English
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Own and be owned Archaeological approaches to the concept of possession 1 Edited by A. Klevnäs & C. Hedenstierna-Jonson Own and be owned Own and be owned Archaeological approaches to the concept of possession P AG – Postdoctoral Archaeological Group Alison Klevnäs & Charlotte Hedenstierna-Jonson (Eds) Stockholm Studies in Archaeology 62, 2015 Own and be owned Archaeological approaches to the concept of possession © 2015 by PAG – Postdoctoral Archaeological Group, and the authors Department of Archaeology and Classical Studies Stockholm University SE-106 91 Stockholm www.archaeology.su.se Editors: Alison Klevnäs & Charlotte Hedenstierna-Jonson English revision: Kristin Bornholdt Collins Cover and typography: Anna Röst, Karneol form & kommunikation Printed by Publit, Stockholm, Sweden 2015 ISSN 0349-4128 ISBN 978-91-637-8212-1 Contents Preface vii Alison Klevnäs & Charlotte Hedenstierna-Jonson Introduction: the nature of belongings 1 Alison Klevnäs Things of quality: possessions and animated objects in the Scandinavian Viking Age 23 Nanouschka Myrberg Burström The skin I live in. The materiality of body imagery 49 Fredrik Fahlander To own and be owned: the warriors of Birka’s garrison 73 Charlotte Hedenstierna-Jonson The propriety of decorative luxury possessions. Reflections on the occurrence of kalathiskos dancers and pyrrhic dancers in Roman visual culture 93 Julia Habetzeder Hijacked by the Bronze Age discourse? A discussion of rock art and ownership 109 Per Nilsson Capturing images: knowledge, ownership and the materiality of cave art 133 Magnus Ljunge Give and take: grave goods and grave robbery in the early middle ages 157 Alison Klevnäs Possession through deposition: the 'ownership' of coins in contemporary British coin-trees 189 Ceri Houlbrook Possession, property or ownership? 215 Chris Gosden About the authors 222 Preface This publication is the result of a workshop held in late 2012 by the Postdoctoral Archaeology Group (PAG) in the Department of Archaeology and Classical Studies at Stockholm University. It was the fifth in an ongoing series of more or less annual events bringing together researchers from inside and outside the department. The tradi tion is to discuss topics which make new connections between different research traditions within the discipline. To this end papers typically do not present finished research projects or programs for future work, but instead are essays exploring ideas and possibilities for applying viewpoints or theoretical concepts to new material. Previous workshops have focused on current approaches in mortuary archaeology and gender research, on matters of scale and process, and on the archaeology of the senses, all of which also resulted in edited volumes in the series Stockholm Studies in Archaeology. This time it was decided to go further and make an attempt on a theme which is not already established and defined as an area of en- quiry in archaeology, but which was felt to resonate and recur in dif- ferent ways through the diverse topics researched by the contributing group. The outcome was a stimulating, even exhilarating discussion day, exploring the numerous and pervasive ways in which concepts of ownership are used in archaeological interpretations, sometimes explicitly and to express well-defined relations of possession, but often implicitly or in more or less metaphorical senses. There then followed a more difficult and lengthy process of framing the often vii innovative approaches as written articles grounded in the discourses of their own periods, but drawing out and connecting lines of obser- vation and argument on this new theme. The papers in this resultant volume, from a wide variety of angles and using diverse material, reveal ownership as a slippery, often obscuring concept, widespread but poorly defined in archaeological discourse from prehistory to contemporary studies. They aim to show how much more exists to be explored beneath an easy reliance on the language of ownership to explain so many differing kinds of connections between materials, humans, values, geographic areas, traditions, artefacts, individuals, groups, and archaeological periods – to name but a few of the owners and owned discussed in the following pages. We wish to thank the discussant, Chris Gosden, for his insight- ful and enthusiastic participation in the workshop day and for his commentary in this volume. Likewise we thank all the speakers and authors, including Gordana Ciric, who was unable to contribute to this publication, and Ceri Houlbrook, who was not present at the workshop but agreed at a late stage to contribute a paper. Anna Röst and Kristin Bornholdt Collins provided valuable and much apprecia- ted support with design and layout and language editing respectively. Last but not least, our gratitude to the Berit Wallenberg Foundation and the Stockholm University Department of Archaeology and Classical Studies for their generous funding of the production and printing of this work. Alison Klevnäs and Charlotte Hedenstierna-Jonson, Stockholm, 2015 viii

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