Preface
The Foundations of Power in the Prehispanic Andes: An
Introduction
Christina A. Conlee and Dennis Ogburn
Preludes to Power in the Highland Late Preceramic Period
Mark Aldenderfer
Power and the Emergence of Complex Polities in the Peruvian
Preceramic
Jonathan Haas, Winifred Creamer, and Alvaro Ruiz
Power, Fairness, and Architecture: Modeling Early Chiefdom
Development in the Central Andes
Charles Stanish and Kevin J. Haley
The Evolution of Authority and Power at Chavín de Huántar,
Peru
John W. Rick
Trade and Social Power in the Southern Titicaca Basin
Formative
Matthew S. Bandy
Crafts and the Materialization of Chiefly Power in Nasca
Kevin J. Vaughn
Sacred Landscapes and Imperial Ideologies: The Wari Empire in
Sondondo, Peru
Katharina Schreiber
Architecture and Power on the Wari-Tiwanaku Frontier
Donna J. Nash and Patrick Ryan Williams
Collapse as Cultural Revolution: Power and Identity in the
Tiwanaku to Pacajes Transition
John Wayne Janusek
The Expansion, Diversification, and Segmentation of Power in
Late Prehispanic Nasca
Christina A. Conlee
Dynamic Display, Propaganda, and the Reinforcement of Provincial
Power in the Inca Empire
Dennis Ogburn
La Chichera y El Patrón: Chicha and the Energetics of Feasting
in the Prehistoric Andes
Justin Jennings
Power and Practice in the Prehispanic Andes: Final Comments
Jerry D. Moore
List of Contributors
Kevin J. Vaughn is an Associate Professor at Purdue University. His research interests include archaeology and prehispanic mining on the south coast of Peru in Nasca.
Dennis Ogburn is an Assistant Professor of Anthropology at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. He is an anthropologist specializing in the archaeology of the New World. His primary research is concentrated in Andean South America, where he has conducted field work mainly in Ecuador, but also in Peru. Main interests include understanding the processes of expansion and maintenance of the Inco Empire and other conquest states in the New World and combining advanced scientific techniques (geochemical sourcing and GIS) with analysis of historical materials (ethnohistory).
Christina A. Conlee is an Associate Professor of Anthropology at Texas State University. Her research areas include Archaeology of the Andean area of South America, collapse of complex societies, social transformations, and ceramic analysis. Her research is currently focused in the Nasca region on the south coast of Peru.
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