Heads of State: Icons, Power, and Politics in the Ancient and Modern Andes

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Routledge, 1 jul 2016 - 293 páginas
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The human head has had important political, ritual and symbolic meanings throughout Andean history. Scholars have spoken of captured and trophy heads, curated crania, symbolic flying heads, head imagery on pots and on stone, head-shaped vessels, and linguistic references to the head. In this synthesizing work, cultural anthropologist Denise Arnold and archaeologist Christine Hastorf examine the cult of heads in the Andes—past and present—to develop a theory of its place in indigenous cultural practice and its relationship to political systems. Using ethnographic and archaeological fieldwork, highland-lowland comparisons, archival documents, oral histories, and ritual texts, the authors draw from Marx, Mauss, Foucault, Assadourian, Viveiros del Castro and other theorists to show how heads shape and symbolize power, violence, fertility, identity, and economy in South American cultures.

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Índice

List of Illustrations
Introduction
THE ETHNOGRAPHY OF ANDEAN HEAD TAKING AND POWER
The Captured Fetish the Mountain Chest and Sacrifice
Drinking the Power of the Dead
The Nested Power of Modern Andean Hierarchies
THE ARCHAEOLOGY OF ANDEAN HEAD TAKING AND POWER
Heads and Andean Political Change from an Archaeological
Central Andean Political Developments
Conclusions
Appendixes
Notes
References
Index
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