Dig Dogs – The Archaeology of Dogs in Japan: Talk by Professor Simon Kaner

CJS Director Professor Simon Kaner

Japan House
Thursday 29 October 2020
17:00-18:00 UTC
Free to attend, booking essential

Dogs are indeed humankind’s oldest best friends and have received preferential treatment since ancient times. Track the long relationship that dogs have enjoyed with the people of Japan while examining archaeological finds in this talk by Professor Simon Kaner, Executive Director of the Sainsbury Institute for the Study of Japanese Arts and Cultures, and Head of the Centre for Archaeology and Heritage and Director of the Centre for Japanese Studies at the University of East Anglia.

Encultured, named and anthropomorphised, dogs embody loyalty, friendship and skill – especially in the hunt. Starting with the newly re-investigated earliest known burials of dogs from a prehistoric rock shelter in rural Shikoku, itself a remarkable early example of ‘architecture for dogs’, we will follow the trail of ancient DNA to track down doggy ancestors through the ages, sniffing our way down anthropological and archaeological paths, stopping to check out a range of canine connections, and chasing after some world-famous dog archaeologists themselves, as we explore how dogs have helped make us human.

The live online talk will be followed by a Q&A during which there will be an opportunity for guests to submit their own questions to the speaker.

This event is part of Japan House London’s Architecture for Dogs season which explores the relationship between dogs and humans. See the exhibition Architecture for Dogs in the Japan House Gallery until 10 January 2021.

%d bloggers like this: