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There seems to be nothing wrong with you.
This is the companion volume to the authors' groundbreaking
Symmetries of Culture, the classic reference for symmetry analysis
of pattern for anthropologists, archaeologists, art historians,
mathematicians, and designers. Central to symmetry analysis is the
use of symmetry in the more precise sense of its geometrical
isometries in contrast to its everyday meaning of balance. For this
volume, Donald Crowe and Dorothy Washburn invited colleagues from
several disciplines to apply the method of symmetry analysis to
actual case studies from cultures around the world. The essays
compiled here explore how cultural information is embedded in the
symmetrical structure of pattern. From descriptions of patterns on
objects as diverse as Nasca embroideries, Ica Valley ceramics,
Quechua textiles, Yombe mats, and Zulu beadwork, as well as from
Amazonian shamanic therapy, ceramic design among the Shipibo, and
Turkish Yoeruk weaving, the contributors reveal how the symmetrical
structures in the patterns describe aspects of each culture's
fundamental principles for living in the world. This approach
offers a profoundly fresh way to read the meaning in pattern by
arguing that pattern communicates through the structural metaphors
embedded in the symmetrical relationship of the pattern parts. The
two volumes together offer readers a revolutionary new window into
the communicative importance of design.
There seems to be nothing wrong with you.
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