The Birth of Mnemosyne. The Emergence of the Image of the Human at the Dawn of Food Production

Luiz Oosterbeek

Resumo


Rock art emerges, some 70 ka ago, as part of a process of anthropic understanding of the territories, framing them within culturally informed landscapes, under specific notions of space, time and cause. The paper starts with a discussion on the relations across memory, perceptions, techniques and oral and written communication. It argues that rock art, as a recording attempt, objectifies processes, i.e., takes them out of the flow of time and freezes them as moments, abstractions. Different functions are accomplished through such a process, from mnemonics to an understanding of time. Rock art may in part be understood as a cluster of mnemonics, rules, beliefs and perceptions, seating at the heart of integrated landscape management, regulating the logistics of human groups through a combination of regulations meant to prevent change (nomos) and an understanding of transformative processes (kairós). The emergence of the Human image is part of this, as an awakening of self-consciousness through memory in dramatic changing times, moving from a biome centred cosmovision of hunter-gatherer societies (in which the human tends to be peripheric in portrayed landscapes dominated by the zoocenosis) into a whole environment and climate centred cosmovision of early farmers (in which the Human emerges as part of the understanding of the transcendent).


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