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Hunter Gatherer Research : Vol. 4, No. 3.

(2020) In Hunter Gatherer Research 4(3). p.287-426
Abstract
The anthropological sciences have long been interested in how hunter-gatherers perceive and interact with their spatial environment. The spatially flexible and dynamic modes of subsistence and residence typical of many hunter-gatherer communities have been considered to be key factors in the social organisation and ideological framing of such communities. However, close attention to spatial representation—in the form of categories and distinctions as they surface in everyday communication and behaviour, for example—has so far been largely restricted to certain subfields within the language and cognitive sciences. This inquiry, on the other hand, has not been concerned with the hunter-gatherer category as such, and it has rarely addressed... (More)
The anthropological sciences have long been interested in how hunter-gatherers perceive and interact with their spatial environment. The spatially flexible and dynamic modes of subsistence and residence typical of many hunter-gatherer communities have been considered to be key factors in the social organisation and ideological framing of such communities. However, close attention to spatial representation—in the form of categories and distinctions as they surface in everyday communication and behaviour, for example—has so far been largely restricted to certain subfields within the language and cognitive sciences. This inquiry, on the other hand, has not been concerned with the hunter-gatherer category as such, and it has rarely addressed spatial representations in their sociocultural context. The present special issue aims to highlight the potentials of a closer integration of these different research perspectives in advancing our understanding of hunter-gatherer space. The contributions—written by experts on a diverse set of communities—address a range of representational phenomena of core concern to this aim. This introductory paper presents space as a domain of inquiry into meaning, it reviews the literature on spatial representation among hunter-gatherer communities, and it outlines some of the major patterns of hunter-gatherer spatial strategies that emerge from the literature and the present contributions. Pointing to both diversity and commonalities across communities, the data offer new views of promising ways forward in the inquiry into hunter-gatherer relationships with the environment. (Less)
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organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Hunter Gatherer Research
editor
O'Meara, Carolyn ; LU ; Rothstein, Mikael and Sercombe, Peter
volume
4
issue
3
pages
287 - 426
publisher
Liverpool University Press
ISSN
2056-3264
project
Language as key to perceptual diversity: an interdisciplinary approach to the senses
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
8410994b-745a-4e39-b57d-263d95d5abb8
alternative location
https://online.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/toc/hgr/4/3
date added to LUP
2020-02-01 12:34:16
date last changed
2021-07-26 04:02:54
@misc{8410994b-745a-4e39-b57d-263d95d5abb8,
  abstract     = {{The anthropological sciences have long been interested in how hunter-gatherers perceive and interact with their spatial environment. The spatially flexible and dynamic modes of subsistence and residence typical of many hunter-gatherer communities have been considered to be key factors in the social organisation and ideological framing of such communities. However, close attention to spatial representation—in the form of categories and distinctions as they surface in everyday communication and behaviour, for example—has so far been largely restricted to certain subfields within the language and cognitive sciences. This inquiry, on the other hand, has not been concerned with the hunter-gatherer category as such, and it has rarely addressed spatial representations in their sociocultural context. The present special issue aims to highlight the potentials of a closer integration of these different research perspectives in advancing our understanding of hunter-gatherer space. The contributions—written by experts on a diverse set of communities—address a range of representational phenomena of core concern to this aim. This introductory paper presents space as a domain of inquiry into meaning, it reviews the literature on spatial representation among hunter-gatherer communities, and it outlines some of the major patterns of hunter-gatherer spatial strategies that emerge from the literature and the present contributions. Pointing to both diversity and commonalities across communities, the data offer new views of promising ways forward in the inquiry into hunter-gatherer relationships with the environment.}},
  editor       = {{O'Meara, Carolyn and Burenhult, Niclas and Rothstein, Mikael and Sercombe, Peter}},
  issn         = {{2056-3264}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{3}},
  pages        = {{287--426}},
  publisher    = {{Liverpool University Press}},
  series       = {{Hunter Gatherer Research}},
  title        = {{Hunter Gatherer Research : Vol. 4, No. 3.}},
  url          = {{https://online.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/toc/hgr/4/3}},
  volume       = {{4}},
  year         = {{2020}},
}