U.S. - Southwest - Antiquities, Native North American Peoples - Anthropology & Archaeology, Archaeology & Ancient Native North American Cultures
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Overview
Ancient Puebloan Southwest traces the evolution of Puebloan society in the American Southwest from the emergence of the Chaco and Mimbres traditions in the A.D. 1000s through the early decades of contact with the Spanish in the sixteenth century. The book focuses on the social and political changes that shaped Puebloan people over the centuries, emphasizing how factors internal to society impacted cultural evolution, even in the face of the challenging environment that characterizes the American Southwest.Synopsis
An introduction to the history of the Puebloan Southwest from the AD 1000s to the sixteenth century.
Editorials
From the Publisher
"It makes the very complex and abundant archaeological record of thsi culture area accessible. It successfully melds processualist approaches to data collection adn analysis with a contingent view of cultural change. It shows how competing hypotheses move interpretation foward. Perhaps most importantly, it is a case study of region that does not have a clear unilineal trajectory from band to state and it forces us to think about how human societies organize themselves in the absence of materially visible hierarchies." Canadian Journal of Archaeology Jonathan Driver, Simon Fraser UniversityBook Details
Published
January 1, 2004
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Pages
338
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780521788809