University Press of Colorado
Framing Complexity in Formative Mesoamerica
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Edited by:
Lisa Delance
and Gary M Feinman
About this book
Contributors present multiple lines of evidence demonstrating the process of social complexity and reconsider a number of traditionally accepted models and presumed tenets as a result of the wealth of empirical data that has been gathered over the past four decades. Their chapters approach complexity as a process rather than a state of being by exploring social aggregation, the emergence of ethnic affiliations, and aspects of regional and macroregional variability.
Framing Complexity in Formative Mesoamerica presents some of the most recent data—and the implications of that data—for understanding the development of complex societies as human beings moved into urban environments. The book is an especially important volume for researchers and students working in Mesoamerica, as well as archaeologists taking a comparative approach to questions of complexity.
Contributors: Jaime J. Awe, Sarah B. Barber, Jeffrey S. Brezezinski, M. Kathryn Brown, Ryan H. Collins, Kaitlin Crow, Lisa DeLance, Gary M. Feinman, Sara Dzul Gongora, Guy David Hepp, Arthur A. Joyce, Rodrigo Martin Morales, George Micheletti, Deborah L. Nichols, Terry G. Powis, Zoe J. Rawski, Prudence M. Rice, Michael P. Smyth, Katherine E. South, Jon Spenard, Travis W. Stanton, Wesley D. Stoner, Teresa Tremblay Wagner
Author / Editor information
Gary M. Feinman is the MacArthur Curator of Anthropology at The Field Museum, Chicago. He is the founding and contact coeditor for the Journal of Archaeological Research and has published more than 15 books and 200 scholarly articles, reviews, and chapters. His research interests include comparative studies of leadership, cooperation, and inequality; preindustrial economics; urbanism; and the complex relations between humans and environments over time.
Reviews
“An innovative and up-to-date synthesis of artifactual, iconographic, and settlement pattern data that examines how diverse groups negotiated new social environments and economic interactions during Mesoamerica’s Formative period.”
—Jessica L. Munson, Lycoming College
"An excellent set of chapters provides new data and updated interpretations of pathways to complexity at a range of important sites from across the region. Anyone interested in the origins of social complexity in Mesoamerica or elsewhere should read this book."
—American Anthropology
“An important leap forward in the investigations into the origins of ancient Maya civilization.”
—Journal of Anthropological Research
"A worthy addition to the growing corpus on the rise of civilization in Mesoamerica that should be widely read and cited by scholars working throughout the culture zone."
—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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Preface
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1 Framing complexity
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2 Heterarchy and the emergence of social complexity in early formative period coastal oaxaca, mexico
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3 Pottery and society during the preclassic period at yaxuná, yucatán
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4 The emergence of complex imagery on late terminal formative gray ware pottery from coastal oaxaca, mexico
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5 The Beginnings of Complexity in the Central Petén Lakes Area
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6 Shifting ceramic styles in the formative period basin of mexico
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7 Urban organization and origins of complexity in the puuc region of northern yucatán
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8 The role of monumental architecture and landscape modification in the development of complexity at early xunantunich, belize
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9 The complexity of figurines
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10 From shell beads to symbolic royal bodies
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11 Why the mesoamerican formative period matters
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Index
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About the authors
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