Territoriality in Archaeology
Description
"Territoriality in Archaeology brings together a series of studies that examine the dynamic nature of land, boundaries, and social space in ancient political life. The authors draw on diverse perspectives, ranging from evolutionary ecology to critical geography, but share a common interest in exploring variation in territorial patterns and processes, as well as developing models that better account for the role of territorial claims in the constitution of social power. Archaeological case studies exploring the diversity of territoriality in the past range from the Andes Mountains and Latin America to Mesopotamia and South Asia."
The Archaeological Papers of the American Anthropological Association (AP3A) is published on behalf of the Archaeological Division of the American Anthropological Association. AP3A publishes original monograph-length manuscripts on a wide range of subjects generally considered to fall within the purview of anthropological archaeology. There are no geographical, temporal, or topical restrictions. Organizers of AAA symposia are particularly encouraged to submit manuscripts, but submissions need not be restricted to these or other collected works.
Table of Contents iii
SECTION I: INTRODUCTION
Chapter 1. Home Turf: Archaeology, Territoriality, and Politics
Parker VanValkenburgh and James F. Osborne 1
SECTION II: ORIGINS AND TRANSITIONS: THE EMERGENCE OF EARLY TERRITORIAL POLITIES
Chapter 2. Territoriality and Politics in the Prehistoric and Classical Aegean
John L. Bintliff 28
Chapter 3. Grass, Water, Salt, Copper, and Others: Pastoralists’ Territorial Strategies in Central Sudan
Augustin F. C. Holl 39
Chapter 4. Mobility, Territorial Commitments, and Political Organization among Late Bronze Age Polities in Southern Caucasia
Alan Greene and Ian Lindsay 54
SECTION III: CONTINGENCY AND VARIABILITY IN POLITICAL TERRITORIALITY
Chapter 5. Territorial and Nonterritorial Routes to Power: Reconciling Evolutionary Ecological, Social Agency, and Historicist Approaches
Benjamin Chabot-Hanowell and Eric Alden Smith 72
Chapter 6. Monumentality, Territoriality, and Networks during the Middle Preclassic in Northwest Honduras
Patricia Urban and Edward Schortman 87
Chapter 7. Settlement, Territory, and the Political Landscape of Late Bronze Age Polities in the Northern Levant
Jesse Casana 107
SECTION IV: TERRITORIALITY AND POLITICS IN ANCIENT EMPIRES
Chapter 8. Geographies of Power: Territoriality and Empire during the Mesopotamian Iron Age
Bradley J. Parker 126
Chapter 9. Conquests of Dharma: Network Models and the Study of Ancient Polities
Namita Sugandhi 145
Chapter 10. Shifting Territorialities under the Inka Empire: The Case of the Rapay´an Valley in the Central Andean Highlands
Alexis Mantha 164
SECTION V: DISCUSSION
Chapter 11. New Territory in Archaeological Theory
Norman Yoffee 189
List of Contributors 193
James F. Osborne (Ph.D. 2011, Harvard University) is an Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow at Johns Hopkins University, director of the Tayinat Lower Town Project, and associate director of the Erbil Plain Archaeological Survey. His current research interests include diaspora in antiquity and the nature of political authority in the Bronze and Iron Ages of the ancient Near East, especially as revealed through spatial analysis of the built environment.
Parker VanValkenburgh (Ph.D. 2012, Harvard University) is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at the University of Vermont and director of the Proyecto Arqueol´ogico Za˜na Colonial. His current research centers on understanding landscape change and political subjectivity in late pre-Hispanic and Spanish colonial Peru.
PUBLISHER:
Wiley
ISBN-13:
9781118871218
BINDING:
Paperback
BISAC:
Social Science
BOOK DIMENSIONS:
Dimensions: 215.90(W) x Dimensions: 279.40(H) x Dimensions: 11.40(D)
AUDIENCE TYPE:
General/Adult
LANGUAGE:
English