University Press of Colorado
Constructions of Time and History in the Pre-Columbian Andes
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Edited by:
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About this book
Constructions of Time and History in the Pre-Columbian Andes explores archaeological approaches to temporalities, social memory, and constructions of history in the pre-Columbian Andes. The authors examine a range of indigenous temporal experiences and ideologies, including astronomical, cyclical, generational, eschatological, and mythical time.
This nuanced, interdisciplinary volume challenges outmoded anthropological theories while building on an emic perspective to gain greater understanding of pre-Columbian Andean cultures. Contributors to the volume rethink the dichotomy of past and present by understanding history as indigenous Andeans perceived it—recognizing the past as a palpable and living presence. We live in history, not apart from it. Within this framework time can be understood as a current rather than as distinct points, moments, periods, or horizons.
The Andes offer a rich context by which to evaluate recent philosophical explorations of space and time. Using the varied materializations and ritual emplacements of time in a diverse sampling of landscapes, Constructions of Time and History in the Pre-Columbian Andes serves as a critique of archaeology’s continued and exclusive dependence on linear chronologies that obscure historically specific temporal practices and beliefs.
Contributors: Tamara L. Bray, Zachary J. Chase, María José Culquichicón-Venegas, Terence D’Altroy, Giles Spence Morrow, Matthew Sayre, Francisco Seoane, Darryl Wilkinson
Author / Editor information
Edward Swenson is associate professor in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Toronto. He holds a BA from Cornell University and an MA and PhD from the University of Chicago. He has served as acting director of the Archaeology Centre at the University of Toronto.
Andrew P. Roddick is associate professor in the Department of Anthropology and director of the Laboratory for Interdisciplinary Research of Archaeological Ceramics at McMaster University. He has a BA and MA from the University of British Columbia and a PhD from the University of California, Berkeley.
Reviews
—Carolyn Dean, University of California, Santa Cruz
“Both a challenge and a corrective to long-held methodology in archaeological practice. . . . it is worth an encounter.”
—Journal for the History of Astronomy
—Anthropos
Topics
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Front Matter
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Contents
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Figures
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Tables
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Acknowledgments
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One Introduction
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Two The Historicity of the “Early Horizon”
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Three Disordering the Chronotope and Visualizing Inhabitation in the Lake Titicaca Basin
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Four The Past as Kin
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Five Past-Forward Past Making
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Six Topologies of Time and History in Jequetepeque, Peru
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Seven Scaling the Huaca
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Eight Hitching the Present to the Stars
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Nine Archaeology, Temporal Complexity, and the Politics of Time
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Contributors
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Index
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