Why should anthropologists draw? The answer proposed in this groundbreaking volume is that drawing uniquely brings together ways of making observing and describing. In twelve chapters a team of authors from the UK Europe North America and Australia explore the potential of a graphic anthropology to change the way we think about creativity and perception to grasp the dynamics of improvisatory practice and to refocus the study of material culture from ready-made objects onto the flows of materials involved in the generation of things. Drawing on expertise in fields ranging from craftwork martial arts and dance to observational cinema and experimental film they ask what it means to follow materials to learn movements and to draw lines. Along the way they contribute to key debates on what happens in making the relation between design and performance how people acquire bodily skills the place of movement in human self-awareness the relation between walking and imagination and the perception of time. This book will appeal not just to social cultural and visual anthropologists but to archaeologists and students of material culture as well as to scholars across the arts humanities and social sciences with interests in perception creativity and material culture.
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