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Chiefdoms
and Chieftaincy
in the Americas
by Elsa M.
Redmond
Foreword by Neil
L. Whitehead
Order
this Book now
These compelling essays about Native American chiefs and their
rise to power break new ground in the study of chiefdoms and
their origins. Archaeologists, historians, and anthropologists
bring up to date the information about many complex chiefdoms
that flourished throughout the Americas, in which numerous
villages and regions were ruled single-handedly by hereditary
chiefs.
The books focus on the leadership of chieftains offers a
new perspective for examining the development of complex chiefly
societies in the Americas. The geographically and chronologically
diverse case studies highlight the dynamics of the temporary
chieftaincy and the development of permanent, hereditary
chiefdoms.
Contents
Foreword by Neil L. Whitehead
Preface by Elsa M. Redmond
Introduction: The Dynamics of Chieftaincy and the Development of
Chiefdoms, by Elsa M. Redmond
1. What Happened at the Flashpoint? Conjectures on Chiefdom
Formation at the Very Moment of Conception, by Robert L. Carneiro
2. Less than Meets the Eye: Evidence for Protohistoric Chiefdoms
in Northern New Mexico, by Winifred Creamer and Jonathan Haas
3. In War and Peace: Alternative Paths to Centralized Leadership,
by Elsa M. Redmond
4. Investigating the Development of Venezuelan Chiefdoms, by
Charles S. Spencer
5. Tupinambá Chiefdoms? by William C. Sturtevant
6. Colonial Chieftains of the Lower Orinoco and Guayana Coast, by
Neil L. Whitehead
7. War and Theocracy, by Pita Kelekna
8. The Muisca: Chiefdoms in Transition, by Doris Kurella
9. Social Foundations of Taino Caciques, by William
Keegan, Morgan Maclachlan, and Bryan Byrne
10. Native Chiefdoms and the Exercise of Complexity in
Sixteenth-Century Florida, by Jerald T. Milanich
11. The Evolution of the Powhatan Paramount Chiefdom in Virginia,
by Helen C. Rountree and E. Randolph Turner III
Elsa M. Redmond, research associate in the
Department of Anthropology at the American Museum of Natural
History in New York, is the author of Tribal and Chiefly
Warfare in South America and A Fuego y Sangre: Early
Zapotec Imperialism in the Cuicatlán Cañada, Oaxaca.
1998. 416
pp. 6 X 9.
34
line art, 3 tables, bibliography, index.
ISBN
0-8130-1620-7
Cloth, $55.00s
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"A substantive contribution to the literature on chiefdoms and circumscription theory
. . . . Chiefdoms and Chieftaincy in the Americas deserves careful and deliberate study by anyone interested in chiefdoms and the rise of elites."--
American Antiquity
"Carries forward the important work of Robert Carneiro and others. Important information, useful ideas, and valuable theoretical positions." -
American Anthropologist
"Stake[s] out a position that will
affect future discussions of the emergence of chiefdoms. . . .
promises to greatly increase our understanding of the emergence
of inequality and institutionalized leadership positions."--John
Scarry, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
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