Talking About Old Stones

I had the very real privilege of presenting a paper at The Lithic Gathering organised by the wonderful Scholars of the Stones research group on Friday May 16.

There was a truly inspiring range of multidisciplinary responses, covering ritualistic practices, sensory investigation through sound, film and haptic interpretation, the reframing of narratives surrounding sacred stone structures, and artistic and aesthetic reframing through storytelling and architecture.

Drawing on work in post-processual and cognitive archaeology, my own paper – ’This is Our Place: Narrative and Interpretation at the Callanish Standing Stones’ explored the different narratives and interpretations surrounding the complex at Calanais on Lewis in the Outer Hebrides, suggesting that the monuments are a product of cosmological modelling as well as local identity.

A symposium is always a temporary community bringing different scholars and practitioners together through shared themes, but this felt like something broader and deeper – a day as much about time and connection and empathy as it was about stone. It was great to feel among friends and to play a small part in such a thought provoking day.

The Lithic Gathering is part of The Stones Project at Manchester Metropolitan Univeristy’s School of Gothic Studies and is led by Dr Fiona Barber with Drs Beccy Kennedy-Shtyk, Hannah Singleton and Martha Lineham.

The Same Sunlight

The latest Paperboats Writers podcast was released on Friday May 02 with artist and writer Christina Riley.

Christina was born in Florida but moved to Ayrshire when she was eight years old. Her practice often focuses on the small details of the natural world, particularly in coastal and underwater environments, and incorporates collections and found objects.

In 2019, Christina started The Nature Library – a roving library of books aimed at connecting people to land, sky and sea, which in 2024 took up a long-term location at a former shipyard worker’s flat in Irvine in Ayrshire in association with the Scottish Maritime Museum. Her photo book The Beach Today was published by Guillemot Press in 2021, and her debut collection of essays was longlisted for Canongate’s Nan Shepherd Prize for Nature Writing in 2019.

Christina reads two extracts from her series of beautiful prose fragments, ‘The Same Sunlight’, published by Gutter Magazine, Issue 30. She discusses her residency at the Mission Blue Argyll ‘Hope Spot’, and the remarkable biodiversity that can be found along the Argyll coast. She also gives a fascinating insight into her writing, her artistic practice, and the books that have inspired her.

Christina is currently working on a series of essays exploring Scotland’s biodiversity, stemming from her time on the artist residency in Argyll.

This episode was recorded in February 2025.

Get it wherever you stream your podcasts!