Summary: | The real and imaginary North has fascinated Europeans throughout history, from classical antiquity to the present day. The North has been seen as an exotic and enchanted world of natural and supernatural marvels: a land of light and dark, of northern lights and the midnight sun, of witches and magic, and of riches ranging from amber to oil. Northern lands conflate fantasies and realities in a particularly prominent manner. This book analyses the archaeologies and histories of the northern fringe of Europe, with a focus on animistic-shamanistic cosmologies and the associated human-environment relations from the Neolithic to modern times. It employs rich but poorly known archaeological, historical, ethnographic and folklore materials, combined with cutting-edge theoretical perspectives drawn from relational ontologies and epistemologies, to present a fresh approach on the prehistory and history of a region that is in many ways pivotal to understanding Europe-wide processes, such as Neolithization and modernization. The book engages with northern relational modes of perceiving and engaging with the world on the one hand and the ‘place’ of the North in European culture on the other. It examines the mythical and actual northern worlds which are intertwined in many curious and sometimes surprising ways, contributing to a deep-time understanding of the globally topical issue and conflicting interests in the North, as expressed by debates and controversies around Arctic resources, nature preservation, and indigenous rights. In its analysis of the archaeologies and histories of the northern fringe of Europe, this book provides a focus on animistic–shamanistic cosmologies and the associated human–environment relations from the Neolithic to modern times. The North has fascinated Europeans throughout history, as an enchanted world of natural and supernatural marvels: a land of light and dark, of northern lights and the midnight sun, of witches and magic and of riches ranging from amber to oil. Northern lands conflate ...
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