Institutional Repository

First-millennium agriculturist ceramics of the Eastern Cape, South Africa : an investigation into some ways in which artefacts acquire meaning

Show simple item record

dc.contributor.advisor Haute, Bernadette van
dc.contributor.author Steele, John
dc.date.accessioned 2009-08-25T10:46:35Z
dc.date.available 2009-08-25T10:46:35Z
dc.date.issued 2009-08-25T10:46:35Z
dc.date.submitted 2001-11
dc.identifier.citation Steele, John (2009) First-millennium agriculturist ceramics of the Eastern Cape, South Africa : an investigation into some ways in which artefacts acquire meaning, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/771> en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/771
dc.description.abstract Artefacts acquire/embody migratory meanings according to contexts of raw material manipulation, use, discard and discourse. First-Millennium Agriculturist ceramics and concomitant private and public significances/use values are placed within aspects of a deep past Stone Age history of space and artefact usage in the Eastern Cape, South Africa. Some thought paradigms and cultural contexts are examined as having directly influenced discourse, what artefacts were foregrounded, and in which manner writers of southern African prehistory considered them. Thereafter ceramic artefacts and associated technologies are focussed upon as being intimate to personal/ community lifeways and worldviews. Domestic and ceremonial utilityware, figurines and masks, as well as clay usage in homebuilding and metalworking, and urges to apply a mark to malleable clay, or deliberately alter and/or bury ceramic artefacts; are explored as manifestations of medium and usage well suited to regularly reconfigured meanings . en
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (xiv, 277 leages) : illustrations
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject Artefacts en
dc.subject Burials en
dc.subject Ceramics en
dc.subject Communication en
dc.subject Community en
dc.subject Death engraving/incising en
dc.subject Early Iron Age en
dc.subject Eastern Cape en
dc.subject South Africa en
dc.subject Figurines en
dc.subject First-Millennium Agriculturist en
dc.subject Gender en
dc.subject Grave goods en
dc.subject Homestead en
dc.subject Kalundu Tradition en
dc.subject Lifeways en
dc.subject Masks en
dc.subject Meaning/significance en
dc.subject Prehistory en
dc.subject Potters en
dc.subject Rites of passage en
dc.subject Sculpture en
dc.subject Style en
dc.subject Technology en
dc.subject Thought en
dc.subject Use value en
dc.subject Utilityware en
dc.subject.ddc 968.702
dc.subject.lcsh East Cape (South Africa) -- Antiquities en
dc.subject.lcsh Pottery, Prehistoric -- Eatern Cape (South Africa) en
dc.subject.lcsh Archaeology and history -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape en
dc.subject.lcsh Excavations (Archaeology) -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape en
dc.subject.lcsh Iron Age -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape en
dc.title First-millennium agriculturist ceramics of the Eastern Cape, South Africa : an investigation into some ways in which artefacts acquire meaning en
dc.type Dissertation en
dc.description.department Art History, Visual Arts and Musicology
dc.description.degree M.A. (Art History)


Files in this item

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record

Search UnisaIR


Browse

My Account

Statistics