3.8 Article

Places of Encounter: Relational Ontologies, Animal Depiction and Ritual Performance at Gobekli Tepe

Journal

CAMBRIDGE ARCHAEOLOGICAL JOURNAL
Volume 27, Issue 2, Pages 313-330

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S095977431600072X

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Archaeologists have long debated the potential role of iconographic repertoires in reconstructing prehistoric ontologies and symbolic systems. The rich and complex imagery unearthed at Pre-Pottery Neolithic Gobekli Tepe (Turkey) has offered a promising ground to address this issue further. Previous interpretations have focused on the symbolic meaning of the depictions, often highlighting their male-centred and violent connotations, while overlooking the spatial and performative contexts of the depictions. This paper engages with this scholarly work in order to propose a new interpretation based on the anthropological framework of relational ontologies and on the analysis of some stylistic and contextual aspects of the iconography. Based on these premises, the curvilinear enclosures of Gobekli Tepe are interpreted as places of encounter devoted to interpersonal relationships among human and non-human agents, enabled by the intermediary role of images. The use of particular techniques of visual representation-including cues of motion and an emphasis on three-dimensionality-along with the centripetal orientation of the animal figures contributed to the animation of the depicted animals and to a sense of convergence of human and non-human beings in the social space of the enclosures.

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