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Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
Feminist Science And Chacoan Archaeology: Reply To Ware., Carrie Heitman
Feminist Science And Chacoan Archaeology: Reply To Ware., Carrie Heitman
Department of Anthropology: Faculty Publications
Ware's comment misses the point of Heitman's (2016) article and further demonstrates the need for feminist science perspectives.
El comentario de Ware no comprende lo fundamental del artículo de Heitman (2016) y demuestra aún más la necesidad de perspectivas científicas feministas.
Hierarchy And Social Inequality In The American Southwest, A.D. 800-1200, Stephen Plog, Carrie Heitman
Hierarchy And Social Inequality In The American Southwest, A.D. 800-1200, Stephen Plog, Carrie Heitman
Department of Anthropology: Faculty Publications
Chaco Canyon in northwestern New Mexico has been the focus of much recent archaeological research on Pueblo groups who lived during the 9th through 12th centuries in the American Southwest. Here, we examine variation in mortuary patterns in the canyon, focusing in particular on one mortuary crypt, to address questions of social differentiation and the chronology of important sociopolitical processes. Based on new radiocarbon dates as well as reanalysis of the stratigraphy and spatial distribution of materials in the mortuary crypt, we conclude that significant social differentiation began in Chaco ca. 150–200 y earlier than suggested by previous research. We …
Houses Great And Small: Reevaluating The 'House' In Chaco Canyon, New Mexico, Carrie Heitman
Houses Great And Small: Reevaluating The 'House' In Chaco Canyon, New Mexico, Carrie Heitman
Department of Anthropology: Faculty Publications
In recent years, a growing number of archaeologists have explored the potential of expanding Lévi-Strauss’ concept of house societies to better understand specific archaeological contexts. Looking specifically at the classificatory distinction between “great houses” and “small houses” within Chaco Canyon (A.D. 850–1180), I suggest this theoretical model might yield new insights with regard to four symbolic dimensions of house construction: the use of wood, directional offerings, resurfacing practices, and the bones of ancestors. Using Puebloan ethnographic literature and cross-cultural comparisons, I suggest a house model analysis may serve to integrate anomalous “ceremonial” dimensions of house construction in an effort to …
Kinship And The Dynamics Of The House: Rediscovering Dualism In The Pueblo Past, Carrie Heitman, Stephen Plog
Kinship And The Dynamics Of The House: Rediscovering Dualism In The Pueblo Past, Carrie Heitman, Stephen Plog
Department of Anthropology: Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.