Department of Archaeology

Liliana Danuta Janik

Selected publications

[1] Janik L.D. (2007). Animism in the rock art and material culture of prehistoric Siberia. In: D.A. Barrowclough and C.A.T. Malone (eds.), Cult in context: Reconsidering ritual in archaeology. Oxford: Oxbow Books
[2] Janik L.D., Roughley C.F., and Szczkesna K. (2007). Skiing on the rocks: The experiential art of fisher-gatherer-hunters in prehistoric northern Russia. Cambridge Archaeological Journal, 17 (3):pp. 297–310. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0959774307000388
[3] Janik L.D. (2005). Redefining social relations—tradition, complementarity and internal tension. In: N. Milner and P.C. Woodman (eds.), Mesolithic studies at the beginning of the 21st Century, pp. 176–194. Oxford: Oxbow Books

Publications

PDF, BibTeX

[1] Janik L.D. (2007). Animism in the rock art and material culture of prehistoric Siberia. In: D.A. Barrowclough and C.A.T. Malone (eds.), Cult in context: Reconsidering ritual in archaeology. Oxford: Oxbow Books
[2] Janik L.D., Roughley C.F., and Szczkesna K. (2007). Skiing on the rocks: The experiential art of fisher-gatherer-hunters in prehistoric northern Russia. Cambridge Archaeological Journal, 17 (3):pp. 297–310. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0959774307000388
[3] Janik L.D. (2005). Redefining social relations—tradition, complementarity and internal tension. In: N. Milner and P.C. Woodman (eds.), Mesolithic studies at the beginning of the 21st Century, pp. 176–194. Oxford: Oxbow Books
[4] Janik L.D. (2004a). Rock carvings of Russian Karelia: Visual perception and cognition. Antiquity, 78 (299). http://www.antiquity.ac.uk/projgall/janik/index.html
[5] Janik L.D. (2004b). "Silent" feminist contribution to archaeological thought. In: L.B. Visnâckij, A.A. Kovalev, and O.A. Seglova (eds.), Arheolog: detektiv i myslitel' sbornik statej, posvâsennyj 77-letiû L'va Samojlovica Klejna Mélanges Klejn Lev Samojlovic (Archaeologist: Detective and thinker), pp. 198–204. St Petersburg: Sankt-Peterburgskii Gosudarstvenyi Universitet
[6] Janik L.D. (2003). Changing paradigms: Food as a metaphor for cultural identity among prehistoric fisher-gatherer-hunter communities of northern Europe. In: M. Parker Pearson (ed.), Food, culture and identity in the Neolithic and Early Bronze Age, British Archaeological Reports international series 1117, pp. 113–124. Oxford: Archaeopress. http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/docdel/art1032774514
[7] Janik L.D. (2002). Wandering weed: The journey of buckwheat (Fagopyrum sp.) as an indicator of human movement in Eurasia. In: K.V. Boyle, A.C. Renfrew, and M.A. Levine (eds.), Ancient interactions: East and west in Eurasia, pp. 299–308. Cambridge: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research
[8] Janik L.D. and Szczkesna K. (2001). Guide for visually impaired people for the "Flaming pottery: Art and landscape in Jomon Japan" exhibition at the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge. Royal Society for the Blind
[9] Janik L.D. (2000). Construction of the individual and transmission of knowledge among early and mid-Holocene communities of northern Europe. In: J. Sofaer Derevenski (ed.), Children and Material Culture, pp. 117–130. London: Routledge
[10] Janik L.D. (1999). Rock art as visual representation—or how to travel to Sweden without Christopher Tilley. In: J. Goldhahn (ed.), Rock Art as Social Representation: Papers from a Session Held at the European Association of Archaeologists Fourth Annual Meeting in Göteborg 1998, British Archaeological Reports International Series 794, pp. 129–140. Oxford: Archaeopress
[11] Janik L.D. (1998). The appearance of food producing societies in the south-eastern Baltic Sea region. In: M. Zvelebil, L. Domanska, and R.W. Dennell (eds.), The Transition to Farming in the Baltic, pp. 237–244. Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press
[12] Janik L.D. and Zawadzka H. (1998). Gender politics in Polish archaeology. In: M. Diaz-Andreu and M.L.S. Sørensen (eds.), Excavating women: A history of women in European archaeology, pp. 86–104. London: Routledge
[13] Janik L.D. (1997). Mesolithic and Neolithic Europe. In: C.J. Scarre (ed.), Atlas of the Ancient World. London: Maris Multimedia
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