Architectural Energetics
Part of: Society for American Archaeology 81st Annual Meeting, Orlando, FL (2016)
Since Elliot Abrams' seminal 1994 book "How the Maya Built their World: Energetics and Ancient Architecture," many archaeological scholars have explored architectural energetics as a methodology and lens through which to understand cultural change, political economy, construction processes, and architectural features. The scholars presenting in this session apply architectural energetics in diverse regions and support many contextual arguments that highlight both the diversity of the ancient past and commonalities of construction. In light of these distinct contextual applications, we explore energetics investigations twenty years on from Abrams' important synthesis. Further, we explore what insights these diverse studies offer for our understanding of how and why people engaged in constructing large architectural features through time and space.
Other Keywords
Architectural Energetics •
Architecture •
Maya •
Urbanism •
Labor •
Landscape Modification •
Monumental Architecture •
China •
Monumentality •
Early State Formation
Geographic Keywords
Europe •
Mesoamerica •
AFRICA •
North America - Southeast •
East/Southeast Asia
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-8 of 8)
- Documents (8)
- Building Charlieu: Chronology and Asset Flow over Time at Saint Fortunatus Monastery, 872-1120 C.E. (2016)
- The Celtic community of the Heuneburg: An Energetics Approach to Their Building Activity between 600 B.C. and 540 B.C. (2016)
- Formulating an Energetics Assessment of the Moundville Landscape (2016)
- Maya Monumental Energetics (2016)
- Monuments for the Living, Monuments for the Dead: A Stone-by-Stone Guide to Mycenaean State Formation (2016)
- Pharaonic Power and Architectural Labor Investment at the Karnak Temple Complex, Egypt (2016)
- Urban Construction as a Social Transformation Process (2016)
- Use of Raw Energy Data in the Estimation of the 'Cost' of Building Iron Age Brochs in Scotland (2016)