Technologies of Enchantment?

Exploring Celtic Art: 400 BC to AD 100

Chris Gosden author Duncan Garrow author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Oxford University Press

Published:2nd Aug '12

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Technologies of Enchantment? cover

While Celtic art includes some of the most famous archaeological artefacts in the British Isles, such as the Battersea shield or the gold torcs from Snettisham, it has often been considered from an art historical point of view. Technologies of Enchantment? Exploring Celtic Art attempts to connect Celtic art to its archaeological context, looking at how it was made, used, and deposited. Based on the first comprehensive database of Celtic art, it brings together current theories concerning the links between people and artefacts found in many areas of the social sciences. The authors argue that Celtic art was deliberately complex and ambiguous so that it could be used to negotiate social position and relations in an inherently unstable Iron Age world, especially in developing new forms of identity with the coming of the Romans. Placing the decorated metalwork of the later Iron Age in a long-term perspective of metal objects from the Bronze Age onwards, the volume pays special attention to the nature of deposition and focuses on settlements, hoards, and burials -- including Celtic art objects' links with other artefact classes, such as iron objects and coins. A unique feature of the book is that it pursues trends beyond the Roman invasion, highlighting stylistic continuities and differences in the nature and use of fine metalwork.

This welcome volume sheds light on the spectacular body of Celtic art from Britain ... this volume offers a useful summation of approaches to Celtic art in Britain. * Andrew Meirion Jones, Antiquity *
offers a fundamental reassessment of the richly decorated metalwork of the British Iron Age * Greg Woolf, Times Literary Supplement *

ISBN: 9780199548064

Dimensions: 219mm x 149mm x 27mm

Weight: 688g

400 pages