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I know I posted a mention of this a few months back, but have just got an email from Paul Devereux, reminding us of it's forthcoming appearance. The Time & Mind Journal on archaeology, consciousness and culture. It's gonna be of serious interest to anyone of us enquiring about the nature of our ancient past.

Check out more here:

http://www.bergpublishers.com/JournalsHomepage/TimeMind/tabid/3253/Default.aspx

[i]“This journal promises to be a bold and exciting venture – intellectually provocative with wide appeal. The articles are intriguing and the Advisory Board is impressive in terms of the diversity of perspectives represented and its scholarly excellence.”[i]
- Wendy Ashmore, University of California at Riverside

Berg Publishers is pleased to announce the launch of its much-anticipated journal Time & Mind. Available from March 2008, this lively and highly interdisciplinary journal presents new perspectives on landscape, monuments, people and culture.

Time & Mind explores such diverse yet curiously related topics as:

· Archaeoastronomy

· The prehistory of mind

· Ancient and pre-industrial symbolic landscapes deriving from religious/mythological beliefs

· The involvement of light and sound in monumental structures

· The phenomenology of landscape

· Ritual

· Rock art

· The multi-sensory properties of natural places from antiquity

· The cognition of memory of place

· Ecopsychology

The inaugural issue will include the following articles:

· Archaeological Evidence for Conceptual Metaphors as Enduring Knowledge Structures by David S.Whitley

· Tse’Biinaholts’a Yalti (Curved Rock that Speaks) by Richard W. Loose

· Biblical Entheogens: a Speculative Hypothesis? by Benny Shanon

· Interview with Peter Fowler by Neil Mortimer

· The Devil on Dartmoor by Jeremy Harte

SUBSCRIBE TODAY at www.bergpublishers.com and receive the journal 3 times a year in March, July and November from 2008 onwards.

The Editorial Board is enough for starters! -

Founding and Managing Editors:
Paul Devereux, Royal College of Art (on Faculty), UK
Neil Mortimer, Former Editor, 3rd Stone: The Journal of Archaeology, Folklore and Myth, UK

Associate Editors:
John Baker, Moorpark College, USA
Michael Winkelman, Arizona State University, USA

Editorial Advisory Board:
Anthony Aveni, Colgate University, USA
Brian Bates, University of Sussex, UK
Barbara Bender, University College London, UK
Herman Bender, Hanwakan Center for Prehistoric Astronomy, Cosmology and Cultural Landscape Studies, Wisconsin, USA
Nicole L. Boivin, Leverhulme Centre for Human Evolutionary Studies, University of Cambridge, UK
David Carmichael, University of Texas at El Paso, USA
Christopher Chippindale, Cambridge University, UK
Tim Darvill, Bournemouth University, UK
Brian Fagan, University of California, Santa Barbara, USA
Miguel H. Farias, Ian Ramsey Centre, University of Oxford, UK
Martin Gledhill, University of Bath, UK
Susan Greenwood, Independent Scholar, UK
Cornelius Holtorf, University of Lund, Sweden
Ronald Hutton, University of Bristol, UK
Bernard Knapp, University of Glasgow, UK
Stanley Krippner, Saybrook Graduate School, San Francisco, USA
E.C. Krupp, Griffith Observatory, Los Angeles, USA
Charles D. Laughlin, Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada
Stephen Lekson, University Museum University of Colorado, USA
George Nash, Bristol University, UK
Timothy R. Pauketat, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, USA
Marlene de Rios, California State University, Fullerton, USA
Benny Shanon, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel
Paul S. C. Tacon, Griffith University, Queensland, Australia
Julian Thomas, University of Manchester, UK
Christopher Tilley, University College London, UK
Deward E. Walker, University of Colorado, Boulder, USA
Robert Wallis, American International University, London, UK
Jennifer Westwood, Former editor, Folklore, UK
David Whitley, Arizona State University, USA

thanks paul - looks very cool. strange that the on-line version is so much more expensive.

what's paul devereux up to at the royal college of art then?