Enemigos Fueron Todos: Vigilancia y Persecución Política en el México Posrevoluc Valdez César Bonilla Artigas Editores |
Historia Imperial del Santo Oficio (Siglos XV-Xix) Fernando Ciaramitaro, Miguel Rodrigues Lourenço Bonilla Artigas Editores |
Comerciantes, Militares y Sacerdotes Vascos en el Mundo Hispánico del Siglo XVII Torales Pacheco, María Cristina Bonilla Artigas Editores |
El Crisol y la Flama: Grupos Sociales y Cofradías en Pátzcuaro (Siglos XVI y XVI Flores García, Laura Gemma Bonilla Artigas Editores |
La Caída del Imperio Otomano y la Creación de Medio Oriente Carlos Martínez Assad Bonilla Artigas Editores |
Exilio Español y Su Vida Cotidiana en México, El. Serrano Migallón, Fernando; Woldenberg José Bonilla Artigas Editores |
La Corte de Isabel II y la Revoluciónde 1854 en Madrid Madame Calderón de la Barca; Raúl Figueroa Esquer Bonilla Artigas Editores |
La Catedral de Puebla. Historia de Proceso Constructivo Molero Sañudo, Antonio Pedro Benemerita Universidad Autonoma de Puebla |
Título: Negotiated Settlements: Andean Communities And Landscapes Under Inka And Spanish | ||
Autor: Steven A. Wernke | Precio: $1280.00 | |
Editorial: University Press Of Florida | Año: 2013 | |
Tema: Arqueologia, Historia | Edición: 1ª | |
Sinopsis | ISBN: 9780813042497 | |
This multidisciplinary_indeed, transdisciplinary_combination of archaeological, historical, and ethnographic research reveals how the Andean people of southern Peru's Colca Valley experienced and responded to successive waves of colonial rule by the Inka and Spanish empires from the fifteenth through seventeenth centuries.
While most research splits the prehispanic and post-conquest eras into separate domains of study, Steven Wernke's perspective explicitly combines archaeological and documentary sources to bridge the Spanish conquest of the Andes. He integrates GIS-based spatial analyses of documentary sources with archaeological survey and the only excavations of an early Spanish doctrinal settlement in the highland Andes to present a local perspective on how new communities and landscapes emerged as part of a continuous process of adapting to consecutive imperial occupations. Wernke's findings show how Spanish ideals of urban order penetrated this rural provincial setting as early as the first generation after the conquest, as well as the ways the integration of Spanish ideals depended on their resonance with prehispanic Andean precedents. Through integration of empirical research and social theory, this volume contributes to current debates on colonial and postcolonial theory, historical anthropology, and the growing field of colonial archaeology. At ease whether examining religious practice at early Franciscan mission settlements or reconstructing prehispanic Andean land use, Wernke argues that we should avoid thinking of relations within the Inka and Spanish states as a dichotomy between colonizers and colonized; instead he traces how new kinds of communities and landscapes were co-produced at the local scale. |