I have had this book recommended to me over time by some awesome folks, and I've been so reluctant because it looked a bit like a) a 'grand theory' book and b) a book by a Western scientist, based on Indigenous knowledge, which is then positioned as something to improve Western lives. Thankfully, however, Kelly is well-aware of at least the former trap, and while the second is not without problems, they are ones common to the entire field.
Kelly's introduction cleverly disarms by candidly discussing the improbability of a PhD thesis unlocking the secrets of Stonehenge. This is not she to say she doesn't believe her own theory, but she carefully takes us through how it took leading experts in the field taking her seriously to let her take herself seriously.
And it isn't really a grand theory here, although there is a good dose of the every-tool-a-hammer thing. Kelly sees the ways in which ceremony, sites, landscapes and objects contribute to preservation of knowledge through memories transmitted generationally. Once she has seen how this functions to allow stupendous memory recall, she sees it everywhere, and that is the only purpose in view in the book.
Kelly is clearly awestruck at the capacities of Aboriginal communities, and the book is a celebration of achievement. It does fight for increased respect for Indigenous knowledge and the accuracy of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander historical knowledge. She names and credits those within Indigenous communities who inform her work. However this is explicitly Western science - Cicero and all - into which Kelly has interpreted Indigenous practice. It is far more respectful that "release the wisdom of the elders" crap on New Age shelves, but, like all Western scholarship based on contemporary Indigenous knowledges, this must, and does, sit uncomfortably as settler-splaining.
So those concerns aside, I had a lot of fun with this book, and I think for those of us educated in a Western tradition, it presents a very relatable set of explanations for how cultural, cognitive and physical landscapes are amalgamated into a single landscape, enabling enormous preservation of knowledge over thousands of years.
Kelly describes this mainly as memory techniques - putting this into the same bracket as the memory palace techniques used by competitors attempting 'feats of memory' like memorising the order of an entire deck of cards. But Kelly rightly points out that contemporary Westerners use these techniques for fairly specific and trivial purposes, whereas non-literate societies used them to create vast worlds of connected knowledge - combining stories, physical spaces, songs, mental maps, mnemonics and dances to accurately recall the right detail at the right moment.
After a chapter which Kelly cheerfully tells us is there to make sure we understand the immensity of indigenous knowledges (which is really well done), Kelly moves on to describe the various memory techniques of various indigenous societies, contemporary (especially Aboriginal) and historic (such as the Maya). From there we whip around the world, travelling from Stonehenge to broader Britain to the Americas to the Pacific, with dozens of sites, cultures and objects discussed. I did find this started to wear slightly, but I was reinvigorated to visit ALL THE ANCIENT SITES (AGAIN in many cases) and test the theories for myself.
I was absolutely bewitched, in particular, by Kelly putting the ditches at the centre (heh) of Standing Stones. I'm not going to spoil her theory - I really think this book is worth reading for anyone interested enough to wonder - but her theories are interesting and will make you think differently. She comments on everything from the way that knowledge restrictions work to protect accuracy. I did get frustrated with her characterisations of knowledge restrictions as power structures, which I don't think is analogous too wealth accumulation.
But I do think my biggest take-home is starting to understand how different non-literate societies might be - including how they might be much more sustainable. Literacy is a recent human phenomenon, and universal literacy even more so. Kelly paints a picture of a world in which our cognitive worlds are inseparable from our environment and our community. Where everywhere we look, what we smell, what we touch, is alive with story and connection. That in the end, is a much more seductive idea than remembering where I put my coffee mug.