Ink with meaning: What we can learn from the tattoos of our ancestors
September 26, 2014 -- Updated 1007 GMT (1807 HKT)
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Tattoos are more popular than ever before
- Having a tattoo has become a marker of individual identity
- A tattoo speaks volumes about cultural background and personal identity
- A new book explores the origins of tattoos and body art through the ages
Today's world is, of
course, almost unrecognizable by comparison. But according to Professor
Nicholas Thomas, Director of the Museum of Archeology and Anthropology
at Cambridge University -- author of a new book about body art -- the tattoo has made a powerful comeback.
"There has been an
extraordinary, epochal change in the last 25 years," he says. "When I
was a child in the 1960s, we didn't see tattoos everywhere. But there
has been an explosion in popularity, and this tells us a lot about who
we are, both culturally and as individuals."
Tattoos were often used to identify tribal members
In fact, according to some studies, up to 38% of Americans and a fifth of British adults have some type of long-term body art.
Many interlocking factors
have a bearing on the popularity of the tattoo. Foremost among them is a
change in the popular conception of the body.
"Because of advances in
technology and medical science, people no longer understand the body as
something natural that you're born with and live with. Instead, we
understand it much more as something that is changeable and mutable,"
says Professor Thomas.
"People have all sorts of
surgical interventions, medical and cosmetic. It is even possible to
change your gender. This means that we now see our body as something we
have a responsibility to design and make. Even something as simple as a
fitness routine or a tan indicates this attitude."
People are trying to invent themselves, and make it permanent.
Professor Nicholas Thomas, Director of the Museum of Archeology and Anthropology at Cambridge University
Professor Nicholas Thomas, Director of the Museum of Archeology and Anthropology at Cambridge University
A permanent stamp of identity
In addition, as global
mobility leads to the increasing pluralization of society, identity is
also being seen as something to be designed rather than inherited.
"People are no longer
simply British or Australian or Californian," he says. "Our identities
are far more particular, linked to our interests, affinities to cultural
or spiritual traditions, tastes in music, and subcultural allegiances.
The tattoo has become a vehicle for that sort of particular
identification."
The recent surge in
popularity for tattooing started in the California counter-cultural
scene of the Sixties and Seventies. During the 20th Century, tattoos had
become associated with criminals, sailors and members of the military,
who had become dislocated from mainstream society and wanted to stamp a
commemoration of that experience on their bodies.
The Californians took
that trend and subverted it, inventing their own designs and viewing
body ink as an art form rather than a type of social branding.
More recently, there's
been a return to traditional forms of tribal tattoos. Ancient Celtic
designs, or those originating in the Pacific Islands, provide
inspiration for a great number of body ink enthusiasts (although it
remains unusual to see a young man with a tattoo of a pencil mustache).
In the past, however,
tattoos were not used to form individual identities. Instead they tended
to be a collective cultural project, constituting particular social
markers. Sometimes they created a spectacular appearance when a tribe
all shared the same design; in other instances, they were used as
initiation or coming-of-age rites.
"In Samoa, men have
elaborate tattoos inked on their thighs, buttocks and lower chest," says
Professor Thomas. "It is a painful ordeal that requires a man to submit
to the authority of the elders. When he emerges, he is celebrated as a
hero."
Globalisation is exposing us to a whole range of traditions from many places.
Professor Nicholas Thomas, Director of the Museum of Archeology and Anthropology at Cambridge Universit
Professor Nicholas Thomas, Director of the Museum of Archeology and Anthropology at Cambridge Universit
Tattoos and individualism
The Samoans, and many
other traditional communities, saw having a tattoo as an important
process rather than a possession. The whole body was tattooed at once,
and it was rarely supplemented. By contrast, the modern tattoo
enthusiast tends to view them as an expanding collection that creates
permanent markers of important moments in an individual's life.
"Globalization is
exposing us to a whole range of traditions from many places," Professor
Thomas says. "Body art is becoming the opposite of conformity, a sort of
badge of travel, or internationalism. People visit places and make them
parts of themselves, so that they will forever bear marks of their
unique visit."
As Jonny Depp once put
it, "My body is my journal and my tattoos are my story". But does this
indicate an underlying cultural anxiety? Are we literally growing less
comfortable in our own skin?
"That's part of it,"
says Professor Thomas. "As the world opens up culturally and
economically, there are fewer certainties than there ever were before,
and far more multiplicity. So people are trying to invent themselves,
and make it permanent."
Often, he continues,
people who feel that a spiritual dimension is missing in contemporary
Western life may be attracted to the spiritual symbols of traditional
cultures around the world, which are often "understood naively in terms
of spirituality".
There has been an extraordinary, epochal change [in tattoo popularity] in the last 25 years.
Professor Nicholas Thomas, Director of the Museum of Archeology and Anthropology at Cambridge University
Professor Nicholas Thomas, Director of the Museum of Archeology and Anthropology at Cambridge University
The Christian approach towards tattoos
The decline of
Christianity in the West has also had a degree of influence on the rise
of the tattoo. Some streams of Christianity have condemned body art due
to the perceived sanctity of the body. But this is far from universal.
During the Renaissance,
for example, European devotees who went on pilgrimage to the Holy Land
often had tattoos of Christian symbols or scenes to commemorate the
experience. Many were carried out by the Razzouk family in the Old City
of Jerusalem (members of that family are still carrying out the service
today).
But whatever your type
of tattoo, research has shown that it profoundly alters the way in which
you will be perceived. Adults with tattoos have been shown to be more sexually active; to engage in riskier behavior; and to have stronger self-esteem and body-confidence, though this sharply declined in women three weeks after the tattoo.
Moreover, academic studies of first impressions of people with tattoos have revealed that they were expected to have had more sexual partners, be less inhibited, and to be probable thrill-seekers.
Whether tattoos are the
cause or the effect of such personality types is a moot point. But one
thing is certain: given that the fragmentation and diversification of
modern life shows no sign of reducing, body art is going to be here to
stay.
Body Art, edited by Nicholas Thomas, published by Thames & Hudson on 13th October at £9.95
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