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      Digital Sensoriality: The Neolithic Figurines from Koutroulou Magoula, Greece

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          Abstract

          The image-based discourse on clay figurines that treated them as merely artistic representations, the meaning of which needs to be deciphered through various iconological methods, has been severely critiqued and challenged in the past decade. This discourse, however, has largely shaped the way that figurines are depicted in archaeological iterations and publications, and it is this corpus of images that has in turn shaped further thinking and discussion on figurines, especially since very few people are able to handle the original, three-dimensional, physical objects. Building on the changing intellectual climate in figurine studies, we propose here a framework that treats figurines as multi-sensorial, affective and dynamic objects, acting within distinctive, relational fields of sensoriality. Furthermore, we situate a range of digital, computational methods within this framework in an attempt to deprive them of their latent Cartesianism and mentalism, and we demonstrate how we have applied them to the study of Neolithic figurines from the site of Koutroulou Magoula in Greece. We argue that such methodologies, situated within an experiential framework, not only provide new means of understanding, interpretation and dissemination, but, most importantly, enable researchers and the public to explore the sensorial affordances and affective potential of things, in the past as well as in the present.

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              Multispectral and hyperspectral imaging technologies in conservation: current research and potential applications

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Cambridge Archaeological Journal
                CAJ
                Cambridge University Press (CUP)
                0959-7743
                1474-0540
                November 2019
                July 09 2019
                November 2019
                : 29
                : 4
                : 625-652
                Article
                10.1017/S0959774319000271
                b42bcbac-6a74-43fd-b14f-ac271ca08558
                © 2019

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

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