Palestinian traditional pottery : a contribution to Palestinian culture / John Landgraf, Owen Rye ; Elizabeth Burr, Jean-Baptiste Humbert, Owen Rye, Hamed Salem, editors.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextLanguage: English Series: Cahiers de la Revue Biblique ; 101. | Cahiers de la Revue Biblique. Series archaeologica ; ; 3.Publisher: Leuven : Peeters, 2021Copyright date: ©2021Description: xxxi, 329 pages : illustrations(chiefly color) , maps (chiefly col.) ; 30 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9789042947085
  • 904294708X
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • NK4146.A1  L36 2021
Contents:
Foreword by Jean-Baptiste Humbert -- Two appreciations of John Landgraf -- Prefaces and acknowledgments -- Introduction by Hamed Salem -- Introduction by John Landgraf and Owen Rye -- Map: Historic Palestine in 1967 -- Map: Distribution of potters' sites, most of them in the Palestinian Territories, in 1977 -- End of a tradition: Palestine's women potters by John Landgraf -- Women potters in ten West Bank villages -- Survival of a tradition: Palestine's male potters by Owen Rye -- Male potters at eight centers in Palestine.
Summary: Palestinian Traditional Pottery' stands out, first and foremost, as a scholarly testimony to the disappeared and disappearing craft of traditional pottery making by Palestinian women and men potters. It offers a contribution that has been long awaited and is long overdue. The material it provides, both textual and pictorial, is based on field research completed in the 1970s by two very different, yet complementary, researchers and authors. For various reasons, this material lay dormant over four decades until it was retrieved and returned to the light of day.00The occasion for the creation of the volume was the death in 2017 in the U.S. of one of the authors, John Landgraf. Fortunately, the other author, Owen Rye in Australia, had most of the written material still in his possession, which was then digitized, arranged, and edited. The graphic material, especially the black and white - and beautiful color - photographs, taken by the two authors, was also gathered and cataloged for use in the book. The photographs of the women potters are particularly poignant, since they date to the final decade of their pottery making activity. Assembling and producing the book required months of painstaking collaborative work by the editors and the layout artist, with results that are worthy of their efforts.00This volume invites readers into the two distinct worlds of Palestinian women and men potters at work in the 1970s: the women in or outside their village homes, and the men in their mostly urban workshops. With Palestinian culture under siege, the scholarship presented here aims to record and preserve a key part of that culture. It stands out equally as a memorial volume for John Landgraf, who lived in Jerusalem from 1965 to 1980, dedicating himself to archaeology, ethnography, and social work.
Item type: PRINT
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Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
PRINT PRINT المكتبة الرئيسية الطابق الثاني ب NK4146.6.A1L36 2021 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 0090000138131

A fieldwork study, 1972-1980.

Includes bibliographical references (p. [265]-268).

Foreword by Jean-Baptiste Humbert -- Two appreciations of John Landgraf -- Prefaces and acknowledgments -- Introduction by Hamed Salem -- Introduction by John Landgraf and Owen Rye -- Map: Historic Palestine in 1967 -- Map: Distribution of potters' sites, most of them in the Palestinian Territories, in 1977 -- End of a tradition: Palestine's women potters by John Landgraf -- Women potters in ten West Bank villages -- Survival of a tradition: Palestine's male potters by Owen Rye -- Male potters at eight centers in Palestine.

Palestinian Traditional Pottery' stands out, first and foremost, as a scholarly testimony to the disappeared and disappearing craft of traditional pottery making by Palestinian women and men potters. It offers a contribution that has been long awaited and is long overdue. The material it provides, both textual and pictorial, is based on field research completed in the 1970s by two very different, yet complementary, researchers and authors. For various reasons, this material lay dormant over four decades until it was retrieved and returned to the light of day.00The occasion for the creation of the volume was the death in 2017 in the U.S. of one of the authors, John Landgraf. Fortunately, the other author, Owen Rye in Australia, had most of the written material still in his possession, which was then digitized, arranged, and edited. The graphic material, especially the black and white - and beautiful color - photographs, taken by the two authors, was also gathered and cataloged for use in the book. The photographs of the women potters are particularly poignant, since they date to the final decade of their pottery making activity. Assembling and producing the book required months of painstaking collaborative work by the editors and the layout artist, with results that are worthy of their efforts.00This volume invites readers into the two distinct worlds of Palestinian women and men potters at work in the 1970s: the women in or outside their village homes, and the men in their mostly urban workshops. With Palestinian culture under siege, the scholarship presented here aims to record and preserve a key part of that culture. It stands out equally as a memorial volume for John Landgraf, who lived in Jerusalem from 1965 to 1980, dedicating himself to archaeology, ethnography, and social work.

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