Building control: architecture and the regimentation of daily life in eighteenth century Santa Cruz de Lancha, Peru

Author(s): Maria Fernanda Boza Cuadros

Year: 2015

Summary

Social control, central to Spanish colonial rule, was exercised through the regimentation of everyday life, the design and construction of space, and the imposition of practices such as sleeping on beds and mode of dress. In this paper I examine the built space at Santa Cruz de Lancha, an eighteenth century Jesuit hacienda in the Pisco valley, and elucidate on the ways in which the site architecture structured everyday life at the estate. Further, I pose and evaluate questions for future research that will bring to light the ways in which the African laborers at the hacienda contended with their enslavement, particularly in the configuration of their domestic spaces. Given the remarkable preservation of the site, Santa Cruz de Lancha is an ideal place to examine the daily operations and lives of a colonial hacienda’s inhabitants.

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Cite this Record

Building control: architecture and the regimentation of daily life in eighteenth century Santa Cruz de Lancha, Peru. Maria Fernanda Boza Cuadros. Presented at The 80th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, San Francisco, California. 2015 ( tDAR id: 396566)

Keywords

Geographic Keywords
South America

Spatial Coverage

min long: -93.691; min lat: -56.945 ; max long: -31.113; max lat: 18.48 ;