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- Powerful Places in the Ancient Andes
Powerful Places in the Ancient Andes
Edited by Justin Jennings and Edward R. Swenson
Andean peoples recognize places as neither sacred nor profane, but rather in terms of the power they emanate and the identities they materialize and reproduce. This book argues that a careful consideration of Andean conceptions of powerful places is critical not only to understanding Andean political and religious history but to rethinking sociological theories on landscapes more generally. The contributors evaluate ethnographic and ethnohistoric analogies against the material record to illuminate the ways landscapes were experienced and politicized over the last three thousand years.
Justin Jennings is the curator of New World archaeology at the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto and an associate professor of anthropology at the University of Toronto. His recent books include Beyond Wari Walls: Regional Perspectives on Middle Horizon Peru (UNM Press), Tenahaha and the Wari State: A View of the Middle Horizon from the Cotahuasi Valley, and Globalizations and the Ancient World.
Edward R. Swenson is an associate professor of anthropology at the University of Toronto. He is a contributor to Andean Archaeology III: North and South and A Companion to the Anthropology of Religion.
"Swenson's argument will interest archaeologists worldwide; the data itself (including seventy-four figures and tables) will be a boon to Andeanists."
--Choice
List of Illustrations
Chapter One. Introduction: Place, Landscape, and Power in the Ancient Andes and Andean Archaeology
Edward R. Swenson and Justin Jennings
Chapter Two. Mountains and Pachakutis: Ontology, Politics, Temporality
Peter Gose
Chapter Three. Rise of the Cordillera Blanca: Orogeny and Imagination in Ancient Ancash, Peru
George F. Lau
Chapter Four. Landscape Biography of a Powerful Place: Raqchi, Department of Cuzco, Peru
Bill Sillar
Chapter Five. Cuni Raya Superhero: Ontologies of Water on Peru's North Coast
Mary Weismantel
Chapter Six. Tiwanaku as Telluric Waterscape: Water and Stone in a Highland Andean City
John Wayne Janusek and Corey Bowen
Chapter Seven. Sacrificial Landscapes and the Anatomy of Moche Biopolitics
Edward R. Swenson
Chapter Eight. Moving between Homes: Landscape, Mobility, and Political Action in the Titicaca Basin
Andrew P. Roddick and John Wayne Janusek
Chapter Nine. Ancestors, Animacy, and Archives: Dynamics of Heterarchy in Pre-Hispanic Northwest Argentina
Elizabeth DeMarrais
Chapter Ten. The View from the Top: The Materiality of Mountainscapes and the Re-creation of Society in the Andean Late Intermediate Period
Anna Guengerich
Chapter Eleven. A Moving Place: The Two-Millennia-Long Creation of Quilcapampa
Justin Jennings, Stephen Berquist, Giles Spence-Morrow, Peter Bikoulis, Felipe Gonzalez-Macqueen, Willy YĆ©pez Álvarez, and Stefanie L. Bautista
Contributors