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Studies in Culture Contact: Interaction, Culture Change, and Archaeology PDF

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CS Studies in ut su i cd Culture Contact k i e s i Interaction, n C Culture Change, u l t and Archaeology u r e C o Edited by n t James G. Cusick a c t Center for Archaeological Investigations www.siupress.com 25 Occasional Paper No. 25 Cusick cvr mech.indd 1 1/7/15 8:28 AM Studies in Culture Contact Visiting Scholar Conference Volumes Processual and Postprocessual Archaeologies: Multiple Ways of Knowing the Past (Occasional Paper No. 10) edited by Robert W. Preucel Paleonutrition: The Diet and Health of Prehistoric Americans (Occasional Paper No. 22) edited by Kristin D. Sobolik Integrating Archaeological Demography: Multidisciplinary Approaches to Prehistoric Population (Occasional Paper No. 24) edited by Richard R. Paine Material Symbols: Culture and Economy in Prehistory (Occasional Paper No. 26) edited by John E. Robb Hierarchies in Action: Cui Bono? (Occasional Paper No. 27) edited by Michael W. Diehl Fleeting Identities: Perishable Material Culture in Archaeological Research (Occasional Paper No. 28) edited by Penelope Ballard Drooker The Dynamics of Power (Occasional Paper No. 30) edited by Maria O’Donovan Hunters and Gatherers in Theory and Archaeology (Occasional Paper No. 31) edited by George M. Crothers Biomolecular Archaeology: Genetic Approaches to the Past (Occasional Paper No. 32) edited by David M. Reed Leadership and Polity in Mississippian Society (Occasional Paper No. 33) edited by Brian M. Butler and Paul D. Welch The Archaeology of Food and Identity (Occasional Paper No. 34) edited by Katheryn C. Twiss The Durable House: House Society Models in Archaeology (Occasional Paper No. 35) edited by Robin A. Beck Jr. Religion, Archaeology, and the Material World (Occasional Paper No. 36) edited by Lars Fogelin The Archaeology of Anthropogenic Environments (Occasional Paper No. 37) edited by Rebecca M. Dean Human Variation in the Americas: The Integration of Archaeology and Biological Anthropology (Occasional Paper No. 38) edited by Benjamin M. Auerbach The Archaeology of Hybrid Material Culture (Occasional Paper No. 39) edited by Jeb J. Card Making Senses of the Past: Toward a Sensory Archaeology (Occasional Paper No. 40) edited by Jo Day The Archaeology of Slavery: A Comparative Approach to Captivity and Coercion (Occasional Paper No. 41) edited by Lydia Wilson Marshall Studies in Culture Contact Interaction, Culture Change, and Archaeology Edited by James G. Cusick Center for Archaeological Investigations Southern Illinois University Carbondale Occasional Paper No. 25 Southern Illinois University Press Carbondale Copyright © 1998 by the Board of Trustees, Southern Illinois University Published by the Center for Archaeological Investigations, Southern Illinois University Carbondale in 1998. Southern Illinois University Press edition published 2015. All rights reserved No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, except as may be expressly permitted by the applicable copyright statutes or in writing by the publisher. Printed in the United States of America 18 17 16 15 4 3 2 1 Cataloging data may be obtained from the Library of Congress. Library of Congress Control Number: 2014955050 ISBN-13: 978-0-8093-3409-4 (paperback) ISBN-10: 0-8093-3409-7 (paperback) ISBN-13: 978-0-8093-3410-0 (e-book) ISBN-10: 0-8093-3410-0 (e-book) Printed by authority of the State of Illinois. For information, write to the Center for Archaeological Investigations, Faner 3479, Mail Code 4527, Southern Illinois University, 1000 Faner Drive, Carbondale, IL 62901; phone (618) 453-5031; or visit us online at www.cai.siu.edu. The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.48-1992. Contents Figures vii Tables ix Preface X 1. Introduction James G. Cusick 1 I. Perspectives on the Study of Culture Contact in Archaeology: Concepts and Critiques 2. Transculturation and Spanish American Ethnogenesis: The Archaeological Legacy of the Quincentenary Kathleen Deagan 23 3. Contexts of Contact and Change: Peripheries, Frontiers, and Boundaries Prudence M. Rice 44 4. Culture Contact in Evolutionary Perspective Robert L. Schuyler 67 5. Evolutionary Theory and the Native American Record of Artifact Replacement Ann F. Ramenofsky 77 6. Culture Contact Structure and Process Edward M. Schortman and Patricia A. Urban 102 7. Historiography of Acculturation: An Evaluation of Concepts and Their Application in Archaeology James G. Cusick 126 8. Violent Encounters: Ethnogenesis and Ethnocide in Long-Term Contact Situations Jonathan D. Hill 146 9. Cultural Interaction and African American Identity in Plantation Archaeology Theresa A. Singleton 172 v I vi Contents II. Archaeological Case Studies in Culture Contact 10. 30,000 Years of Culture Contact in the Southwest Pacific John Edward Terrell 191 11. World System Theory and Alternative Modes of Interaction in the Archaeology of Culture Contact Gil f. Stein 220 12. Nubia and Egypt: Interaction, Acculturation, and Secondary State Formation from the Third to First Millennium B.C. Stuart Tyson Smith 256 13. Consumption, Agency, and Cultural Entanglement: Theoretical Implications of a Mediterranean Colonial Encounter Michael Dietler 288 14. Culture Contact, Identity, and Change in the European Provinces of the Roman Empire Peter S. Wells 316 15. Toltec Invaders and Spanish Conquistadors: Culture Contact in the Postclassic Teotihuacan Valley, Mexico Susan Toby Evans 335 16. Culture Contact and Change in West Africa Christopher R. DeCorse 358 17. Cultural Transformation Within Enslaved Laborer Communities in the Caribbean Douglas V. Armstrong 378 18. Forced Relocation, Power Relations, and Culture Contact in the Missions of La Florida Rebecca Saunders 402 19. Some Think It Impossible to Civilize Them at All: Cultural Change and Continuity Among the Early Nineteenth-Century Potawatomi Mark f. Wagner 430 20. Lacand6n Maya Culture Change and Survival in the Lowland Frontier of the Expanding Guatemalan and Mexican Republics Joel W. Palka 457 21. Afterword: Toward an Archaeological Theory of Culture Contact Rani T. Alexander 476 Contributors 497 Index 499 Figures 3-1. A typology of border situations 50 3-2. Frontier colonization and sources of innovation 55 5-1. Functional replacement model 85 5-2. Little Tennessee: Proportions of Native American to European sherds 89 5-3. Knife River: Proportions of Native American to European sherds 90 5-4. Little Tennessee: Proportions of stone to kaolin pipes 91 5-5. Knife River: Proportions of stone to kaolin pipes 91 5-6. Little Tennessee: Proportions of unmodified to modified metal objects 93 5-7. Modified to unmodified metal objects compared with number of artifact categories 94 10-1. The Sepik coast of Papua New Guinea 201 11-1. Map of the Near East showing Uruk colonies/ enclaves and local settlements 222 11-2. Distance-parity model of interregional interaction 231 11-3. Topographic map of Hacmebi showing main excavation areas 234 11-4. Comparison of ceramic ware types between Uruk and Local Late Chalcolithic contexts in northeast area 235 11-5. Comparison of faunal patterning in Uruk and Local Anatolian contexts at Hacmebi and in contemporaneous sites 236 11-6. Comparison of sheep I goat body part frequencies in Uruk and Local Anatolian contexts at Hacmebi 243 11-7. Uruk administrative technology at Hacmebi 244 11-8. Hacmebi Local Anatolian administrative technology employing stamp seals 245 12-1. The Egyptian core, Nubian, and Syro-Palestinian peripheries and international exchange 257 12-2. The dendritic political economy of Syro-Palestine, Egypt, and Nubia 264 12-3. City and cemetery at Kerma 267 12-4. Bypassing the Egyptian core 268 12-5. Development of the Napatan Royal Cemetery at el-Kurru 270 12-6. Doyle's model of peripheral societies 275 12-7. Acculturation and status at Fadrus Cemetery 279 13-1. Lower Rhone basin and Hallstatt region 292 vii I viii Figures 14-1. Map showing Late La n~ne and early Roman period sites in southern Germany and northern France mentioned in the text 319 14-2. Reconstruction drawing of the Roman period temple excavated at Empel in the Netherlands 325 15-1. Teotihuacan Valley, Mexico: Aztec period settlement pattern 337 15-2. Cihuatecpan: An Aztec period village in the Teotihuaca.n Valley, Mexico 343 15-3. Figurines from Cihuatecpan 347 16-1. Long-distance trade routes in West Africa 360 16-2. Eighteenth-century map of the West African coast 361 16-3. Plan of Locus B excavation, Elmina, Ghana 371 16-4. Pottery from Elmina, Ghana 373 17-1. Topographic map showing general location of the African Jamaican villages at Seville 382 17-2. 1721 map of Seville 384 17-3. Seville African Jamaican settlement: Early village 385 17-4. Hypothetical reconstruction of House 16: Early village 386 17-5. Excavation plan of House 16 (house-yard compound) 387 17-6. 1791 map of Seville 388 17-7. Household and Community Functional Analysis 394 17-8. Personal and Community Presentation 395 18-1. Native American peoples of La Florida 406 18-2. The peoples of Timucua 409 18-3. The Guale coast and approximate boundaries of the southern chiefdoms 410 18-4. Principal mission villages of Apalachee 411 18-5. Irene phase filfot cross motif; San Marcos Complicated Stamped; San Marcos, overstamped; Irene incised 420 18-6. Examples of the World Symbol on shell gorgets 421 18-7. Location of Irene and Mission Period sites used in study 422 20-1. Area occupied by the Lacand6n Maya and nineteenth-century archaeological sites 460 20-2. Lacand6n lithics 465 20-3. Artifacts from El Caobal 466 20-4. Lacand6n ceramics from El Caobal 467 Tables 5-1. Frequencies and Proportions of Sherds and Pipes: Little Tennessee 87 5-2. Frequencies and Proportions of Sherds and Pipes: Knife River 88 5-3. Unmodified and Modified Metal Objects: Little Tennessee 92 5-4. Proportions of Unmodified and Modified Metal Objects and Category Richness at Toqua and Chota 94 11-1. Frequency of Common Plant Types by Late Chalcolithic Phase 239 11-2. Hacmebi Phase B-Bitumen Residues and Silica Gloss: Uruk vs. Local Contexts 242 12-1. Chronology 260 15-1. Provisional Chronology for the Teotihuacan Valley 336 19-1. List of Goods Shipped to Bernardu s Laughton on September 6, 1832 439 19-2. Comparison of Functional Artifact Categories: Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century Fur Trade Invoices 441 19-3. Artifact Types at Windrose Site by Functional Category 447 19-4. Comparison of Functional Categories: Windrose and Rock Island Sites 448 19-5. Comparison of Potawatomi Manufactures: Rock Island and Windrose Sites 449 ix

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People have long been fascinated about times in human history when different cultures and societies first came into contact with each other, how they reacted to that contact, and why it sometimes occurred peacefully and at other times was violent or catastrophic.Studies in Culture Contact: Interacti
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