Warning Cookies are used on this site to provide the best user experience. If you continue, we assume that you agree to receive cookies from this site. OK

Landscape Stability and the Formation of Social Memory in Prehistoric Britain

A GIS-based study on the nature of fast and slow-changing landscapes

£45.00
Author:
Christopher Dwan
Publication Year:
2024
Language:
English
ISBN:
9781407361772
Paperback:
158 pages, Illustrated throughout in black & white, and colour.
BAR number:
B690
+

Description

People know places through inhabiting their textures and contours and relating places in space and time. Historically significant places come into being through inhabitation, and the world becomes sedimented with memories. These memories may be manifest within and referenced by materials.

Prehistorians often interpret the creation and maintenance of social memory in evidence of long-term continuities of inhabitation and the veneration of ancient structures and the people who built and inhabited them. This study focuses on GIS methods in landscape archaeology, using case studies from Bodmin Moor and the Somerset Levels in southwestern Britain. By treating the landscape as an active participant in the processes of memory-making the book asks how a landscape's rate of change will affect the maintenance of memories across short and long timescales.

AUTHOR

Christopher Dwan is originally from the northeastern United States and earned his PhD from the University of Sheffield. His research interests include prehistoric Britain, landscape archaeology, social memory, and the creation of place. He currently lives in Sheffield with his fiancée and their hedgehog, Petunia.