An interdisciplinary study of an aesthetic particularism: the ‘Split representation in the Art of Asia and America’

An interdisciplinary study of an aesthetic particularism: the ‘Split representation in the Art of Asia and America’. This thesis consists of an interdisciplinary research on an aesthetic particularism mentioned by anthropologist Claude Levi-Strauss as “The split representation in the Art of Asia and...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Pothier, Benjamin
Other Authors: Grant, Jane, Faculty of Arts and Humanities
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Plymouth 2022
Subjects:
Art
PhD
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10026.1/18638
https://doi.org/10.24382/941
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spelling ftunivplympearl:oai:pearl.plymouth.ac.uk:10026.1/18638 2024-01-07T09:41:56+01:00 An interdisciplinary study of an aesthetic particularism: the ‘Split representation in the Art of Asia and America’ Pothier, Benjamin Grant, Jane Faculty of Arts and Humanities 2022 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10026.1/18638 https://doi.org/10.24382/941 en eng University of Plymouth 10414511 http://hdl.handle.net/10026.1/18638 http://dx.doi.org/10.24382/941 2023-12-01 12 months Art Art History Anthropology Ethnobotanic Shamanism Craft Cognitive Science Genetic Anthropology Archaeology PhD Thesis Doctorate 2022 ftunivplympearl https://doi.org/10.24382/941 2023-12-08T00:07:34Z An interdisciplinary study of an aesthetic particularism: the ‘Split representation in the Art of Asia and America’. This thesis consists of an interdisciplinary research on an aesthetic particularism mentioned by anthropologist Claude Levi-Strauss as “The split representation in the Art of Asia and America” in his 1944 eponymous essay. Most researchers include in this group the Ainu and Jōmon People from Japan, tribes from the Amur Basin, Haida people from the Northern West Coast, Ancient China (Yangshao and Shang Dynasty), Māori People from New Zealand and Kadiweu people from Brazil. I conducted this inquiry through an online study of academic papers and historical accounts available in online databases, by doing researches at research Libraries in Paris, through field researches in the Arctic, Brazil, Hawaii and Nepalese Himalayas, and email exchanges with some prominent researchers in the disciplines related to the subject, on a six years period. In the framework of this research I was also granted an access to National Geographic's Genographic Project database, and allowed by Claude Levi-Strauss's widow to consult his unpublished expeditions notebooks at his archival fund at the research Library of the National Institute of Art History in Paris. After presenting Levi-Strauss's Life and the roots of his theories, I discuss more recent perspectives on the subject, including the researches of the British anthropologist Alfred Gell. Before exposing the cases of the widely acknowledged connections between the pattern making habits amongst certain hunter-gatherers tribes with the taking of entheogenic drugs during rituals, with the Shipibo people from the Peruvian Amazonia and their ritualistic use of Ayahuasca as a case study. I continue by providing dedicated inter-disciplinary case studies on the specific patterns of each populations from the Split Representation groups using up to date researches results in the fields of Art theory, ethnobotany and allied sciences. Using an interdisciplinary and technoetic ... Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Arctic haida PEARL (Plymouth Electronic Archiv & ResearchLibrary, Plymouth University) Arctic New Zealand Strauss ENVELOPE(-73.182,-73.182,-71.649,-71.649)
institution Open Polar
collection PEARL (Plymouth Electronic Archiv & ResearchLibrary, Plymouth University)
op_collection_id ftunivplympearl
language English
topic Art
Art History
Anthropology
Ethnobotanic
Shamanism
Craft
Cognitive Science
Genetic Anthropology
Archaeology
PhD
spellingShingle Art
Art History
Anthropology
Ethnobotanic
Shamanism
Craft
Cognitive Science
Genetic Anthropology
Archaeology
PhD
Pothier, Benjamin
An interdisciplinary study of an aesthetic particularism: the ‘Split representation in the Art of Asia and America’
topic_facet Art
Art History
Anthropology
Ethnobotanic
Shamanism
Craft
Cognitive Science
Genetic Anthropology
Archaeology
PhD
description An interdisciplinary study of an aesthetic particularism: the ‘Split representation in the Art of Asia and America’. This thesis consists of an interdisciplinary research on an aesthetic particularism mentioned by anthropologist Claude Levi-Strauss as “The split representation in the Art of Asia and America” in his 1944 eponymous essay. Most researchers include in this group the Ainu and Jōmon People from Japan, tribes from the Amur Basin, Haida people from the Northern West Coast, Ancient China (Yangshao and Shang Dynasty), Māori People from New Zealand and Kadiweu people from Brazil. I conducted this inquiry through an online study of academic papers and historical accounts available in online databases, by doing researches at research Libraries in Paris, through field researches in the Arctic, Brazil, Hawaii and Nepalese Himalayas, and email exchanges with some prominent researchers in the disciplines related to the subject, on a six years period. In the framework of this research I was also granted an access to National Geographic's Genographic Project database, and allowed by Claude Levi-Strauss's widow to consult his unpublished expeditions notebooks at his archival fund at the research Library of the National Institute of Art History in Paris. After presenting Levi-Strauss's Life and the roots of his theories, I discuss more recent perspectives on the subject, including the researches of the British anthropologist Alfred Gell. Before exposing the cases of the widely acknowledged connections between the pattern making habits amongst certain hunter-gatherers tribes with the taking of entheogenic drugs during rituals, with the Shipibo people from the Peruvian Amazonia and their ritualistic use of Ayahuasca as a case study. I continue by providing dedicated inter-disciplinary case studies on the specific patterns of each populations from the Split Representation groups using up to date researches results in the fields of Art theory, ethnobotany and allied sciences. Using an interdisciplinary and technoetic ...
author2 Grant, Jane
Faculty of Arts and Humanities
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Pothier, Benjamin
author_facet Pothier, Benjamin
author_sort Pothier, Benjamin
title An interdisciplinary study of an aesthetic particularism: the ‘Split representation in the Art of Asia and America’
title_short An interdisciplinary study of an aesthetic particularism: the ‘Split representation in the Art of Asia and America’
title_full An interdisciplinary study of an aesthetic particularism: the ‘Split representation in the Art of Asia and America’
title_fullStr An interdisciplinary study of an aesthetic particularism: the ‘Split representation in the Art of Asia and America’
title_full_unstemmed An interdisciplinary study of an aesthetic particularism: the ‘Split representation in the Art of Asia and America’
title_sort interdisciplinary study of an aesthetic particularism: the ‘split representation in the art of asia and america’
publisher University of Plymouth
publishDate 2022
url http://hdl.handle.net/10026.1/18638
https://doi.org/10.24382/941
long_lat ENVELOPE(-73.182,-73.182,-71.649,-71.649)
geographic Arctic
New Zealand
Strauss
geographic_facet Arctic
New Zealand
Strauss
genre Arctic
haida
genre_facet Arctic
haida
op_relation 10414511
http://hdl.handle.net/10026.1/18638
http://dx.doi.org/10.24382/941
op_rights 2023-12-01
12 months
op_doi https://doi.org/10.24382/941
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