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Public Lecture by Dr Sam Challis

When: Thursday, 18 July 2024 - Thursday, 18 July 2024
Where: Origins Centre
Braamfontein Campus West
Start time:18:00
Enquiries:

bookings.origins@wits.ac.zatammy.hodgskiss@wits.ac.za;

Cost: R70 adults, R40 students/pensioners. Tickets on webtickets or at the door.

The impact of contact and colonization on indigenous worldviews, rock art, and the history of southern Africa - “The Disconnect”, by Dr Sam Challis

Rock art in southern Africa testifies to successive interactions among hunter-gatherers, incoming African herders, African farmers, and, later, European settlers. New subject matter, however, is not simply incorporated into the preexisting tradition. Images that depict novel motifs are made differently from the “traditional corpus,” usually rougher in appearance (in both paintings and engravings), more dynamic, or made with vivid and chalky paints. The drop in pigment quality is likely owing to the disruption and ultimate decimation of indigenous groups and the subsequent breakdown in trade and social communications—the Disconnect. The changes owe more, it seems, to the increasingly mixed membership of the art-producing people and the mixing of their cosmologies, albeit with specific cultural survivals. Precolonial contact images speak to a multitude of interactions that can inform the archaeological record, and colonial-era rock art constitutes a major component of the historical archive that offers a reverse gaze from an indigenous perspective.

Dr Sam Challis is Director of the Rock Art Research Institute, Wits. His research focus is on the interaction between hunter-gatherers, pastoralists and farmers, as well as Europeans, as expressed in rock art around the world.

Tickets on webtickets or at the door. R70 adults, R40 students/pensioners

Enquiries: bookings.origins@wits.ac.zatammy.hodgskiss@wits.ac.za0117174700

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