Petroglyphs, Pictographs, and Projections

UNIVERSITY OF UTAH PRESSISBN: 9781607816188

Native American Rock Art in the Contemporary Cultural Landscape

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Sale price$89.99
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By Richard A. Rogers
Imprint:
UNIVERSITY OF UTAH PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
PAPERBACK
Dimensions:
229 x 152 mm
Weight:
680 g
Pages:
384

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Description

Richard A. Rogers is a professor of communication studies and associate faculty in women's and gender studies at Northern Arizona University. A rock art enthusiast, avocational archaeologist, and cultural critic, he has explored the rock art and archaeology of the Colorado Plateau and Great Basin for more than 25 years. His research has appeared in numerous journals, including American Indian Rock Art, Communication and Critical/Cultural Studies, and Environmental Communication.

"Rogers gives unique perspective on contemporary western engagements with rock art.... The book prompts readers to challenge their assumptions and culturally constructed sensibilities about how they engage with rock art, and it will certainly compliment the libraries of rock art enthusiasts, archaeologists, historians, and scholars of Native American and Women's Studies." --California Archaeology "Well worth a read by all who appreciate and experience rock art in not only the United States, but throughout the world." --KIVA "Archaeologists and historic preservation specialists certainly need to read this. Rock art enthusiasts need to read this. Park rangers need to read this. And others should read it--the unsettling messages and useful critical methods are broadly important, and the focus on rock art delivers an appealing, fun, and attractive way to 'get it.' There are no other books that do what this one does." --Kelley Hays-Gilpin, professor, Northern Arizona University and Edward Bridge Danson Chair of Anthropology at the Museum of Northern Arizona "Incredibly current.... Rogers has presented a thoroughly researched and supported discussion of rock art's increasing role in the contemporary cultural landscape. It is a publication that should become a staple source in any rock art scholar's or enthusiast's research arsenal." --La Pintura "Richard Rogers's examination of communication referencing Native American rock art in the non-Native discursive world guarantees polarized responses. Disarmingly accessible, unflaggingly self-reflexive and subtly subversive, the book is grounded in scholarship about and personal interaction with those who mark the landscape of the Southwest. In so doing Rogers articulates and undermines the rock art community's common sense understandings. The result is an invitation to dialogue among cultures otherwise radically separated by time and space." --Christine Oravec, Professor Emerita of Communication, University of Utah "This is a significant work. Approaching rock art from a critical/cultural studies perspective while focusing on contemporary uses and understandings of rock art positions the book in a unique space--a space that will garner attention from archaeologists, anthropologists, historians, among others, and challenge scholars to think differently about the images and sites that form the focus of their research." --Liam M. Brady, author of Pictures, Patterns, and Objects: Rock-Art from the Torres Strait Islands, NE Australia "This unique book has much to offer. From those who feel uneasy about using indigenous visual heritage to illustrate books or knickknacks to others who are perpetually skeptical of interpretations of the 'meanings' of indigenous petroglyphs and pictographs, Rogers provides potent and sobering diagnoses." --American Antiquity

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