Ambiguous truths? : people and animals in pre-christian Scandinavia
(2003) p.212-230- Abstract
- Abstract in Undetermined
In our modern society peoples attitudes towards animals are inconsistent, to say the least. Behind these heterogeneous attitudes there are several economic and cultural aspects. What possibilities do we have of studying relations between humans and animal, between nature and culture, in the distant past? What are our starting-points? How do we understand realities that differ from our own? What are our challenges?
In pre-Christian society animals were of great importance not only for the food supply and practical matters but also
in religious cults. In the course of time human's views of animals and nature has changed, and both animals and nature have increasingly been subjected to human's devices. The... (More) - Abstract in Undetermined
In our modern society peoples attitudes towards animals are inconsistent, to say the least. Behind these heterogeneous attitudes there are several economic and cultural aspects. What possibilities do we have of studying relations between humans and animal, between nature and culture, in the distant past? What are our starting-points? How do we understand realities that differ from our own? What are our challenges?
In pre-Christian society animals were of great importance not only for the food supply and practical matters but also
in religious cults. In the course of time human's views of animals and nature has changed, and both animals and nature have increasingly been subjected to human's devices. The traditional nature-culture dichotomy is problematic, and gives rise to intense discussion. This is a challenge to the archaeologists, who are forced to depart from their traditional trains of thought and their accustomed archaeological classifications. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/539265
- author
- Jennbert, Kristina LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2003
- type
- Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- animals, archaeological interpretations, sexuality, animals ethics, the concept of burial, classification, attitudes to humans and animals
- host publication
- Scandinavian archaeological practice - in theory : proceedings from the 6th Nordic TAG, Oslo 2001
- editor
- Bergstøl, Jostein
- pages
- 212 - 230
- publisher
- Oslo : Institutt for arkeologi, kunsthistorie og konservering, Universitetet i Oslo
- ISSN
- 1503-4089
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 831327f7-047c-4f3b-ae3f-324fb5c436e3 (old id 539265)
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-01 16:26:02
- date last changed
- 2021-03-22 12:55:23
@inbook{831327f7-047c-4f3b-ae3f-324fb5c436e3, abstract = {{Abstract in Undetermined<br/>In our modern society peoples attitudes towards animals are inconsistent, to say the least. Behind these heterogeneous attitudes there are several economic and cultural aspects. What possibilities do we have of studying relations between humans and animal, between nature and culture, in the distant past? What are our starting-points? How do we understand realities that differ from our own? What are our challenges?<br/>In pre-Christian society animals were of great importance not only for the food supply and practical matters but also<br/>in religious cults. In the course of time human's views of animals and nature has changed, and both animals and nature have increasingly been subjected to human's devices. The traditional nature-culture dichotomy is problematic, and gives rise to intense discussion. This is a challenge to the archaeologists, who are forced to depart from their traditional trains of thought and their accustomed archaeological classifications.}}, author = {{Jennbert, Kristina}}, booktitle = {{Scandinavian archaeological practice - in theory : proceedings from the 6th Nordic TAG, Oslo 2001}}, editor = {{Bergstøl, Jostein}}, issn = {{1503-4089}}, keywords = {{animals; archaeological interpretations; sexuality; animals ethics; the concept of burial; classification; attitudes to humans and animals}}, language = {{eng}}, pages = {{212--230}}, publisher = {{Oslo : Institutt for arkeologi, kunsthistorie og konservering, Universitetet i Oslo}}, title = {{Ambiguous truths? : people and animals in pre-christian Scandinavia}}, url = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/4671676/8831373.pdf}}, year = {{2003}}, }