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Culture of Stone
Sacred and Profane Uses of Stone among the Dani
by O. W. "Bud" Hampton
When O. W. "Bud" Hampton made his first visit to the Dani peoples in remote parts of the highlands of Irian Jaya in 1982 and 1983, he found that their ancient stone-based technology and culture remained virtually intact. During repeated and extended visits over twelve years, Hampton had unparalleled and irreproducible opportunities to observe the development, use, and cultural meaning of stone tool assemblages in their traditional contexts.In this unique study, Hampton describes the complete cultural inventory of both secular and sacred stones, ranging from utilitarian stone tools and profane symbolic stones to symbolic spirit stones, power stones with multiple functions, and medicinal power stone tools. Hampton portrays the complete cycle of quarrying, manufacture, trade, and uses of the stones. Specific archaeological questions are addressed in the context of a culture that provides the answers: What stimulates production? How are tool and symbolic stones manufactured? What is the role of women in quarrying and production? What kinds of trade mechanisms are at work? Are the distributions of stone tool types reliable language and cultural boundary markers? How are sacred stones created and what are their uses? The answers constitute a rosetta stone of information for worldwide application.
Hampton examines the complexities of the highlanders' unseen spirit world and its symbiotic relationship with the world of the seen. The dual worship of ancestor spirits and the sun within the same belief system is described, with all of the attendant material props.
This extensively illustrated, carefully documented, holistic ethnography studies in detail a living people's rarely observed behavior and practices associated with stone tools and sacred objects within their integrated society. Archaeologists, anthropologists, and other scholars, as well as inquisitive general readers, will find Culture of Stone a valuable contribution not only to the ethnography of the New Guinea highlands but also to archaeology and anthropology in general.
"Bud Hampton has written a superb book. As an anthropologist also working in Irian Jaya, I am extremely impressed with his analyses. He ranges from archaeology to ethnography, by way of geology, and does so in ways that demonstrate both the depth of his knowledge and the care with which he conducts fieldwork. I know of no other book as comprehensive in its treatment of stone tools. In addition, the photographs are extremely impressive."—Peter W. Van Arsdale, Ph.D., President, National Association for the Practice of Anthropology
O. W. "BUD" HAMPTON, Adjoint Curator of Anthropology, University of Colorado Museum, Boulder, holds five degrees with multiple honors, including a doctorate of anthropology from Texas A&M University and a master's in geology from the University of Colorado. His work reflects some thirty years of accumulated experience with diverse indigenous peoples in remote areas on three continents.
Number Two: Texas A&M University Anthropology Series
Culture of Stone
ISBN 0-89096-870-5
$69.95sLC 98-49894. 8 1/2x11. 360 pp. 8 color, 201 b&w photos.
36 line drawings. Maps. Bib. Index.
Anthropology. Archaeology.Publication Date: September 1999.
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