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Ancient Tiwanaku

Ancient Tiwanaku

Ancient Tiwanaku

Author:
John Wayne Janusek, Vanderbilt University, Tennessee
Published:
May 2008
Availability:
Available
Format:
Paperback
ISBN:
9780521016629

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$42.00
USD
Paperback
$76.00 USD
Hardback

    Nearly a millennium before the Inca forged a pan-Andean empire in the South American Andes, Tiwanaku emerged as a major center of political, economic, and religious life on the southern shores of Lake Titicaca. Ancient Tiwanaku synthesizes a wealth of past and current research on this fascinating high-altitude civilization. In the first major synthesis on the subject in nearly fifteen years, John Wayne Janusek explores Tiwanaku civilization in its geographical and cultural setting, tracing its long rise to power, vast geopolitical influences, and violent collapse.

    • Most recent (and 2nd) synthesis of knowledge on the subject for 15 years
    • Tiwanaku was perhaps the most important pre-Inca, South American civilization
    • Especially attends to Tiwanaku's rise to power, great social diversity, and violent collapse

    Reviews & endorsements

    "...Janusek succeeds in synthesizing existing research on Tiwanaku in an impressively solid way...This book is a valuable contribution to Tiwanaku scholarship, setting a benchmark for the newer generation of students and scholars." --Mathieu Viau-Courville, Sainsbury Research Unit, University of East Anglia, UK

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    Product details

    May 2008
    Paperback
    9780521016629
    362 pages
    227 × 151 × 18 mm
    0.51kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • 1. Unraveling Tiwanaku's mystery
    • 2. Land and people
    • 3. Early complexity and Tiwanaku's ascendance
    • 4. The city of Tiwanaku
    • 5. The rural hinterland
    • 6. Tiwanaku geopolitics
    • 7. Wari and Tiwanaku
    • 8. Collapse and regeneration
    • 9. Conclusions.
      Author
    • John Wayne Janusek , Vanderbilt University, Tennessee

      Dr Janusek is an archaeologist interested in the development of complex societies and cities in the South American Andes. His theoretical interests include: human agency/identity, power relations, urbanism, space and place, ritual practice, and household archaeology. He has worked in the Bolivian highlands since 1987, conducting research principally focused on Tiwanaku civilization and its precursors. He currently directs an interdisciplinary research project at the sites of Khonkho Wankane and Iruhito in the southern Lake Titicaca Basin (see http://antiquity.ac.uk/ProjGall/janusek/janusek.html). His publications include: Craft and Local Power (Latin American Antiquity 10, 1999), Out of Many, One (Latin American Antiquity 13, 2002), Tiwanaku and its Precursors (Journal of Archaeological Research 12, 2004), Household and City in Tiwanaku (in Andean Archaeology, Helaine Silverman ed., Blackwell 2004), five chapters in Tiwanaku and its Hinterland Vol. II (Alan Kolata ed., Smithsonian Institution, 2003), and The Changing 'Nature' of Tiwanaku Religion (World Archaeology 38, 2006). His two books are Identity and Power in the Ancient Andes (Routledge, 2004) and Ancient Tiwanaku (Cambridge, 2008).