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Andean ontologies : new archaeological perspectives / edited by María Cecilia Lozada and Henry Tantaleán.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: Gainesville : University Press of Florida, (c)2019.Description: 1 online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780813057149
Subject(s): Genre/Form: LOC classification:
  • BD357 .A534 2019
Online resources: Available additional physical forms:
Contents:
Henry Tantaleán and María Cecilia Lozada -- Andean ontologies: an introduction to the substance / Henry Tantaleán -- Huaca Salango: a sacred center on the coast of Ecuador / Richard Lunnis -- Analogism at ontology at Chavín de Huantár / Mathew Sayre and Nicco La Mattina -- Indigenous anatomies: ontological dissections of the Andean body / María Cecilia Lozada -- Moche corporeal ontologies: transfiguration, ancestrality and death. a perspective from the late Moche Cemetery of San Jos¿ de Moro, Northern Perú / Luis A. Muro, Luis Jaime Castillo B. and Elsa Tomasto C -- Moche mereology: synecdochical ontologies at the late Moche site of Huaca Colorada, Peru / Giles Spence-Morrow and Edward Swenson -- The head as the seat of the soul: a medium for spiritual reciprocity in the early Andes / Mary Glowacki -- Towards a situated ontology of bodies and landscapes in the archaeology of the southern Andes / Benjamin Alberti and Andres Laguens -- Ontological foundations of Inka archaeology / Bruce Mannheim -- A past as a place: examining the archaeological implication of the Aymara Pacha Concept in the Bolivian altiplano / Juan Villanueva Criales -- Rock art, historical ontologies, and the genealogy of landscape: a case study from the southern Andes / Andr¿s Troncoso -- Final commentaries: a matter of substance, and the substance of matter / Catherine Allen.
Subject: This volume explores the Pre-Columbian Andean concepts of time, space, and the human body through objects, skeletal remains, and language. This interdisciplinary approach to conceptualizing what the Andean concepts of being may have been brings contemporary approaches to past notions of the sacred, with each discipline adding its own unique perspective to the Andean ontology. A particular strength of this volume is that most of the contributors are South American researchers, offering North American scholars entry into scholarship that has been confined to Spanish language publications.
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Includes bibliographies and index.

Preface / Henry Tantaleán and María Cecilia Lozada -- Andean ontologies: an introduction to the substance / Henry Tantaleán -- Huaca Salango: a sacred center on the coast of Ecuador / Richard Lunnis -- Analogism at ontology at Chavín de Huantár / Mathew Sayre and Nicco La Mattina -- Indigenous anatomies: ontological dissections of the Andean body / María Cecilia Lozada -- Moche corporeal ontologies: transfiguration, ancestrality and death. a perspective from the late Moche Cemetery of San Jos¿ de Moro, Northern Perú / Luis A. Muro, Luis Jaime Castillo B. and Elsa Tomasto C -- Moche mereology: synecdochical ontologies at the late Moche site of Huaca Colorada, Peru / Giles Spence-Morrow and Edward Swenson -- The head as the seat of the soul: a medium for spiritual reciprocity in the early Andes / Mary Glowacki -- Towards a situated ontology of bodies and landscapes in the archaeology of the southern Andes / Benjamin Alberti and Andres Laguens -- Ontological foundations of Inka archaeology / Bruce Mannheim -- A past as a place: examining the archaeological implication of the Aymara Pacha Concept in the Bolivian altiplano / Juan Villanueva Criales -- Rock art, historical ontologies, and the genealogy of landscape: a case study from the southern Andes / Andr¿s Troncoso -- Final commentaries: a matter of substance, and the substance of matter / Catherine Allen.

This volume explores the Pre-Columbian Andean concepts of time, space, and the human body through objects, skeletal remains, and language. This interdisciplinary approach to conceptualizing what the Andean concepts of being may have been brings contemporary approaches to past notions of the sacred, with each discipline adding its own unique perspective to the Andean ontology. A particular strength of this volume is that most of the contributors are South American researchers, offering North American scholars entry into scholarship that has been confined to Spanish language publications.

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