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The essays in this volume, which was originally published in 1983,
present an innovative and unified approach to the archaeological
analysis and interpretation of art and design. Together, they
illustrate a variety of approaches to the discovery and systematic
description of the underlying regularities in the organization of
art forms. A group of ethnographic papers show how structural
consistencies both relate to and reflect other aspects of the
cultural system, while archaeological case studies suggest
potential uses of this concept for archaeological material. Thus,
through the study of the structure of art, this volume adds to our
understanding of the total cultural system. The case studies
demonstrate how structural analysis can be particularly systematic
for comparative synchronic and diachronic studies. Moreover, the
contributors boldly advocate a cognitive basis for the structural
regularities underlying art forms. They demonstrate that art is
much more than decoration; it is a sophisticated communication
system.
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.
Emory Sekaquaptewa dedicated most of his life to promoting Hopi
literacy and creating written materials to strengthen the language
and lifeway of his people. He understood how intimately cultural
ideas are embedded in language, and by transcribing and translating
early recordings of katsina songs he helped strengthen the
continuity of Hopi religious thought and cultural practices.
Sekaquaptewa believed that the advice contained in the katsina
songs, some of which were recorded over a century ago, could be
used by future generations as guideposts for navigating
contemporary life. Hopi Katsina Songs contains Hopi transcriptions,
English translations, and detailed commentaries of 150 katsina
songs, recorded throughout the twentieth century from all three
Hopi mesas, as well as twenty-five recorded by Sekaquaptewa
himself. To further continue the creative process of the Hopi
legacy, Sekaquaptewa included song fragments with the hope that
readers would remember the songs and complete them. These features
make his collection an invaluable resource for preserving and
teaching Hopi language and culture.
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