Olmec, Chavin, and Things in Between: A Comparative Approach to Emergent Complex Societies
Part of: Society for American Archaeology 81st Annual Meeting, Orlando, FL (2016)
The goal of this session is to revisit the Formative Americas as an integrated field of study, and consider its role in nomothetic interpretations of emergent social complexity. Over the last two decades, our refined understanding of early Pre-Columbian cultures has given us new tools to enable these cross-cultural analyses. Integrating this growing dataset with new approaches such as hybridity, neo-diffusionism, and cognitive anthropology, facilitates the exploration of the independent, yet related, social organizations of North and South America. As a first step toward exploring these opportunities, this session asks a diverse set of participants to interpret their scholarship on emergent complexity through an explicitly comparative lens. These objectives extend beyond particularist approaches to cultural horizons like Olmec and Chavin, and enable a meaningful consideration of heterogeneity in emergent Pre-Columbian social structures. By comparing Mesoamerica and the Andes as test beds of emergent social complexity, this session aims to interrogate universalist explanations, and guide continuing research on these phenomena worldwide.
Other Keywords
Formative •
Mesoamerica •
andes •
Ceramics •
Maya •
Agriculture •
Architecture •
Ritual •
Exchange •
Maize Agriculture
Geographic Keywords
South America •
Mesoamerica •
Central America
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-14 of 14)
- Documents (14)
- Absolute Chronology of the Early Formative Revisited: Bayesian Analysis, Radiocarbon Chronology, and the Emergence of Pottery in the Americas (2016)
- Are Two Heads Still Better than One? Considering a Unified Origin for American Social Complexity (2016)
- Before Teotihuacan: The Origins of Complex Society in the Northeast Basin of Mexico (2016)
- Brothers of Invention: Comparing Trends in Innovation in the New World Formative (2016)
- Configuring Space in a Valdivia Town: Social Precepts, Cosmological Mandates, and Emergent Hierarchy in Early Formative Ecuador (2016)
- The Development of Sedentary Communities in the Maya Lowlands in a Comparative Perspective (2016)
- Early Ceramics, Human Mobility, And Interaction: Original Developments Of The Pacific Coast In Connection With South America (2016)
- Early Complexity in the Upper Amazon: The Mayo Chinchipe-Marañón. (2016)
- Early expressions of persistent leadership and inequality in the Andean Preceramic (2016)
- Eating and drinking maize: diverging roles for a staple crop in the Formative Americas (2016)
- Formative Urbanism in the Andean Lake Titicaca Basin (2016)
- On the Question of Olmec Architecture and Sculpture Beyond the Gulf Coast (2016)
- Power in Middle Range Societies: A Cross-Cultural Perspective (2016)
- The Scale of Formative Transitions in the Americas: Inferences Based on the Texture and Timing of Demographic Changes (2016)