Alternative Leadership Strategies in the Prehispanic Southwest

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In considerations of societal change, the application of classic evolutionary schemes to prehistoric southwestern peoples has always been problematic for scholars. Because recent theoretical developments point toward more variation in the scale, hierarchy, and degree of centralization of complex societies, this book takes a fresh look at southwestern prehistory with these new ideas in mind.

This is the first book-length work to apply new theories of social organization and leadership strategies to the prehispanic Southwest. It examines leadership strategies in a number of archaeological contexts—from Chaco Canyon to Casas Grandes, from Hohokam to Zuni—to show striking differences in the way that leadership was constructed across the region.

These case studies provide ample evidence for alternative models of leadership in middle-range societies. By illustrating complementary approaches in the study of political organization, they offer new insight into power and inequality. They also provide important models of how today's archaeologists are linking data to theory, providing a basis for comparative analysis with other regions.

Author(s): Barbara J. Mills
Publisher: University of Arizona Press
Year: 2000

Language: English
City: Tucson

Cover
Title Page, Copyright, Dedication
Contents
Preface
1. Alternative Models, Alternative Strategies: Leadership in the Prehispanic Southwest
2. Political Leadership and the Construction of Chacoan Great Houses, A.D. 1020-1140
3. Leadership, Long-Distance Exchange, and Feasting in the Protohistoric Rio Grande
4. Ritual as a Power Resource in the American Southwest
5. Ceramic Decoration as Power: Late Prehistoric Design Change in East-Central Arizona
6. Leadership Strategies in Protohistoric Zuni Towns
7. Organizational Variability in Platform Mound-Building Groups of the American Southwest
8. Leadership Strategies among the Classic Period Hohokam
9. The Institutional Contexts of Hohokam Complexity and Inequality
10. Leadership at Casas Grandes, Chihuahua, Mexico
11. Reciprocity and Its Limits: Considerations for a Study of the Prehispanic Pueblo World
12. Dual-Processual Theory and Social Formations in the Southwest
References Cited
About the Contributors
Index