Description

Book Synopsis
Dan Monah (11 February 1943 – 21 September 2013) was a specialist in the Neo-Eneolithic of Romania and, in particular, of the Precucuteni-Cucuteni-Tripolye cultural complex, last affiliated with the Iași Institute of Archaeology of the Romanian Academy. His core body of work, consisting of seven books and more than one hundred articles published, primarily deals with coroplastic analysis as a mean of insight into the religion and art of the Neo-Eneolithic communities. With a unique approach to the study of what he formally named ‘the religious life of Cucuteni-Tripolye communities’, Dan Monah was a staunch critic of the dominant cultural-historic paradigm and its natural interpretative consequences: the supremacy of typological description, the Cartesian ranking of religious systems from simple to complex, and the avoidance of ‘unclassable’ occurrences. The present volume embodies his vision applied to the analysis of the Cucuteni-Tripolye anthropomorphic representations, resting on two structural pillars: an in-depth knowledge of a large body of history of religion literature, and an almost exhaustive inventory of the Cucuteni- Tripolye anthropomorphic representations, the result of over three decades of personal, patient and meticulous examination of the archaeological data. For those in his wake, Dan Monah’s open and unprejudiced approach to the prehistoric imagery enclosed in this book constitutes a solid cornerstone on which further work can be built. Its pages should be turned, if not on account of the wealth of information inside, but for the author’s pleasant and refreshing style at least.

Table of Contents
Introduction; Chapter I: History of Research; Chapter II: Conditions of Discovery; Chapter III: Materials and Techniques; Chapter IV: The Statuettes and Figurines of the Cucuteni A Phase; Chapter V: The Statuettes and Figurines of the Cucuteni A Phase; Chapter VI: Statuettes and Figurines of the Cucuteni B Phase; Chapter VII: Violin-shaped Pendants; Chapter VIII: Anthropomorphic Pots; Chapter IX: Ceramics with Anthropomorphic Decoration; Chapter X: Anthropomorphic Objects; Chapter XI: Garments, Footwear, Jewellery, and Hairdos; Chapter XII: Great Religious Themes; Figures; References; Index

Anthropomorphic Representations in the

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    A Paperback / softback by Dan Monah

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      Publisher: Archaeopress
      Publication Date: 07/06/2016
      ISBN13: 9781784912321, 978-1784912321
      ISBN10: 1784912328

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Dan Monah (11 February 1943 – 21 September 2013) was a specialist in the Neo-Eneolithic of Romania and, in particular, of the Precucuteni-Cucuteni-Tripolye cultural complex, last affiliated with the Iași Institute of Archaeology of the Romanian Academy. His core body of work, consisting of seven books and more than one hundred articles published, primarily deals with coroplastic analysis as a mean of insight into the religion and art of the Neo-Eneolithic communities. With a unique approach to the study of what he formally named ‘the religious life of Cucuteni-Tripolye communities’, Dan Monah was a staunch critic of the dominant cultural-historic paradigm and its natural interpretative consequences: the supremacy of typological description, the Cartesian ranking of religious systems from simple to complex, and the avoidance of ‘unclassable’ occurrences. The present volume embodies his vision applied to the analysis of the Cucuteni-Tripolye anthropomorphic representations, resting on two structural pillars: an in-depth knowledge of a large body of history of religion literature, and an almost exhaustive inventory of the Cucuteni- Tripolye anthropomorphic representations, the result of over three decades of personal, patient and meticulous examination of the archaeological data. For those in his wake, Dan Monah’s open and unprejudiced approach to the prehistoric imagery enclosed in this book constitutes a solid cornerstone on which further work can be built. Its pages should be turned, if not on account of the wealth of information inside, but for the author’s pleasant and refreshing style at least.

      Table of Contents
      Introduction; Chapter I: History of Research; Chapter II: Conditions of Discovery; Chapter III: Materials and Techniques; Chapter IV: The Statuettes and Figurines of the Cucuteni A Phase; Chapter V: The Statuettes and Figurines of the Cucuteni A Phase; Chapter VI: Statuettes and Figurines of the Cucuteni B Phase; Chapter VII: Violin-shaped Pendants; Chapter VIII: Anthropomorphic Pots; Chapter IX: Ceramics with Anthropomorphic Decoration; Chapter X: Anthropomorphic Objects; Chapter XI: Garments, Footwear, Jewellery, and Hairdos; Chapter XII: Great Religious Themes; Figures; References; Index

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