Rethinking the Inka: the View from the South
Part of: Society for American Archaeology 81st Annual Meeting, Orlando, FL (2016)
Historically, the majority of archaeological research on Inka provincial rule has been done in the Collasuyu, the quarter of the empire that falls within what is today far southern Peru, Bolivia, Argentina, and Chile. More recently (since 2010, based on Thomson-Reuters Web of Knowledge), there are twice the number of articles on Collasuyu than on the rest of the empire combined. Yet within the English-language literature on the Inka, this vast body of research (published primarily by Latin American archaeologists in Spanish) is infrequently acknowledged or cited. The findings of recent and long-term projects on the Inka in Collasuyu require us to rethink Inka provincial expansion and administration and the dynamics of Inka-local relations. Papers in this session highlight research on landscape and memory, political economy, ideology and materiality, and identity and authority, and as such contribute not only to Andean studies but to a general understanding of ancient empires.
Other Keywords
Inca •
Political economy •
Chronology •
Religion •
Interaction •
Landscape •
Memory •
Lowlands •
Inka •
Argentina
Geographic Keywords
South America
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-10 of 10)
- Documents (10)
- Copper Rich, Water Poor: The Southern Atacama under Inka Rule (2016)
- Dynamics of Interaction and Integration between the Tawantinsuyu and the Local Populations of the Kollasuyu: Contributions from the Mediterranean Valleys of Central Chile (2016)
- The Illusion of Total Control in the Provinces of the Inca Empire (2016)
- Impact, Expansion and Heterogeneous Strategies of the Tawantinsuyu at its Borders: The Case of Santiago del Estero in the Eastern Lowlands of Argentina (2016)
- Inca Landscapes in Midwest Catamarca (Argentina) (2016)
- Landscape, Social Memory, and Materiality at Calchaqui Valley during Inka Domination in Northwest Argentina (2016)
- The Mineral Heart of Tawantinsuyo: Metal Production, Power and Religiosity in Qollasuyo (2016)
- Márgenes y Centros del Tawantinsuyo en el Norte Grande de Chile (Andes Centro Sur) (2016)
- Re-thinking social and chronological palimpsest. Inka domination in Quebrada de Humahuaca (Jujuy, Argentina) (2016)
- The Role of Chullpas in the Inca Conquest of the Southern Altiplano: A Symmetrical Approach (2016)