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Indigenous Tattoo Traditions: Humanity through Skin and Ink
Barnes and Noble
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Indigenous Tattoo Traditions: Humanity through Skin and Ink in Franklin, TN
Current price: $39.95

Barnes and Noble
Indigenous Tattoo Traditions: Humanity through Skin and Ink in Franklin, TN
Current price: $39.95
Loading Inventory...
Size: Hardcover
A beautifully illustrated history of Indigenous tattooing practices around the world
Tattooing within Indigenous communities is a timehonored practice that binds the tattoo recipient to a deeply felt collective history. More than mere decoration, tattoos embody cultural values, ancestral ties, and spiritual beliefs.
Indigenous Tattoo Traditions
captures ancient tribal tattooing practices and their contemporary resurgence, highlighting a beautiful aspect of humanity’s shared cultural heritage.
Transporting readers through history, Lars Krutak explores the art and customs of tattooing across numerous ancestral lands, including Africa, the Middle East, the Americas, the Arctic, Oceania, Japan, Southeast Asia, and Siberia. He illustrates how tattoos function as a form of writing that defines and structures community life, performing as rites of passage, symbols of rank, and signs of marital or religious devotion, among other facets of culture. We are introduced to the heavily tattooed Li women of China’s Hainan Island with their elaborate facial and body tattoos, the bold indelible markings of Papua New Guinea's Indigenous peoples, and innovative cultural tattoo practitioners who are rebuilding a skinmarking legacy for future generations to come.
With numerous images published for the first time and an illuminating foreword by cultural historian Sean Mallon,
opens a window onto one of the world’s most vibrant yet misunderstood mediums of human expression.
Tattooing within Indigenous communities is a timehonored practice that binds the tattoo recipient to a deeply felt collective history. More than mere decoration, tattoos embody cultural values, ancestral ties, and spiritual beliefs.
Indigenous Tattoo Traditions
captures ancient tribal tattooing practices and their contemporary resurgence, highlighting a beautiful aspect of humanity’s shared cultural heritage.
Transporting readers through history, Lars Krutak explores the art and customs of tattooing across numerous ancestral lands, including Africa, the Middle East, the Americas, the Arctic, Oceania, Japan, Southeast Asia, and Siberia. He illustrates how tattoos function as a form of writing that defines and structures community life, performing as rites of passage, symbols of rank, and signs of marital or religious devotion, among other facets of culture. We are introduced to the heavily tattooed Li women of China’s Hainan Island with their elaborate facial and body tattoos, the bold indelible markings of Papua New Guinea's Indigenous peoples, and innovative cultural tattoo practitioners who are rebuilding a skinmarking legacy for future generations to come.
With numerous images published for the first time and an illuminating foreword by cultural historian Sean Mallon,
opens a window onto one of the world’s most vibrant yet misunderstood mediums of human expression.
A beautifully illustrated history of Indigenous tattooing practices around the world
Tattooing within Indigenous communities is a timehonored practice that binds the tattoo recipient to a deeply felt collective history. More than mere decoration, tattoos embody cultural values, ancestral ties, and spiritual beliefs.
Indigenous Tattoo Traditions
captures ancient tribal tattooing practices and their contemporary resurgence, highlighting a beautiful aspect of humanity’s shared cultural heritage.
Transporting readers through history, Lars Krutak explores the art and customs of tattooing across numerous ancestral lands, including Africa, the Middle East, the Americas, the Arctic, Oceania, Japan, Southeast Asia, and Siberia. He illustrates how tattoos function as a form of writing that defines and structures community life, performing as rites of passage, symbols of rank, and signs of marital or religious devotion, among other facets of culture. We are introduced to the heavily tattooed Li women of China’s Hainan Island with their elaborate facial and body tattoos, the bold indelible markings of Papua New Guinea's Indigenous peoples, and innovative cultural tattoo practitioners who are rebuilding a skinmarking legacy for future generations to come.
With numerous images published for the first time and an illuminating foreword by cultural historian Sean Mallon,
opens a window onto one of the world’s most vibrant yet misunderstood mediums of human expression.
Tattooing within Indigenous communities is a timehonored practice that binds the tattoo recipient to a deeply felt collective history. More than mere decoration, tattoos embody cultural values, ancestral ties, and spiritual beliefs.
Indigenous Tattoo Traditions
captures ancient tribal tattooing practices and their contemporary resurgence, highlighting a beautiful aspect of humanity’s shared cultural heritage.
Transporting readers through history, Lars Krutak explores the art and customs of tattooing across numerous ancestral lands, including Africa, the Middle East, the Americas, the Arctic, Oceania, Japan, Southeast Asia, and Siberia. He illustrates how tattoos function as a form of writing that defines and structures community life, performing as rites of passage, symbols of rank, and signs of marital or religious devotion, among other facets of culture. We are introduced to the heavily tattooed Li women of China’s Hainan Island with their elaborate facial and body tattoos, the bold indelible markings of Papua New Guinea's Indigenous peoples, and innovative cultural tattoo practitioners who are rebuilding a skinmarking legacy for future generations to come.
With numerous images published for the first time and an illuminating foreword by cultural historian Sean Mallon,
opens a window onto one of the world’s most vibrant yet misunderstood mediums of human expression.
















