ABSTRACT

Making and Growing brings together the latest work in the fields of anthropology and material culture studies to explore the differences - and the relation - between making things and growing things, and between things that are made and things that grow. Though the former are often regarded as artefacts and the latter as organisms, the book calls this distinction into question, examining the implications for our understanding of materials, design and creativity. Grounding their arguments in case studies from different regions and historical periods, the contributors to this volume show how making and growing give rise to co-produced and mutually modifying organisms and artefacts, including human persons. They attend to the properties of materials and to the forms of knowledge and sensory experience involved in these processes, and explore the dynamics of making and undoing, growing and decomposition. The book will be of broad interest to scholars in the fields of anthropology, archaeology, material culture studies, history and sociology.

chapter 1|24 pages

Making and Growing

An Introduction

chapter 2|20 pages

Silk Production

Moths, Mulberry and Metamorphosis

chapter 3|20 pages

Between Nature and Art

Casting from Life in Sixteenth-Century Europe

chapter 4|24 pages

Anatomopoeia

chapter 7|20 pages

Stitching Lives

A Family History of Making Caribou Skin Clothing in the Canadian Arctic

chapter 8|16 pages

Gardening and Wellbeing

A View from the Ground

chapter 9|20 pages

Making Plants and Growing Baskets

chapter 10|20 pages

Skill and Aging

Perspectives from Three Generations of English Woodworkers

chapter 11|18 pages

Movement in Making

An Apprenticeship with Glass and Fire

chapter 12|18 pages

Growing Granite

The Recombinant Geologies of Sludge