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The Archaeology of Everyday Life at Early Moundville
Wilson, Gregory D.
Hardcover
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BOOK SYNOPSIS
Complex Mississippian polities were neither developed nor sustained in a vacuum. A broad range of small-scale social groups played a variety of roles in the emergence of regionally organized political hierarchies that governed large-scale ceremonial centers. Recent research has revealed the extent to which interactions among corporately organized clans led to the development, success, and collapse of Moundville. These insights into Moundville’s social complexity are based primarily on the study of monumental architecture and mortuary ceremonialism. Less is known about how everyday domestic practices produced and were produced by broader networks of power and inequality in the region.    Wilson’s research addresses this gap in our understanding by analyzing and interpreting large-scale architectural and ceramic data sets from domestic contexts. This study has revealed that the early Mississippian Moundville community consisted of numerous spatially discrete multi-household groups, similar to ethnohistorically described kin groups from the southeastern United States. Hosting feasts, dances, and other ceremonial events were important strategies by which elite groups created social debts and legitimized their positions of authority. Non-elite groups, on the other hand, maintained considerable economic and ritual autonomy through diversified production activities, risk sharing, and household ceremonialism. Organizational changes in Moundville’s residential occupation highlight the different ways kin groups defined and redefined their corporate status and identities over the long term.  

AUTHOR BIO
Gregory D. Wilson is Adjunct Professor of Anthropology, Muhlenberg College, Allentown, Pennsylvania

BOOK REVIEWS
"This work is interesting and will undoubtedly be of great value to archaeologists working on Mississippian sites in the Southeast and Mississippi Valley." —Jeffrey M. Mitchem, Associate Archeologist, Arkansas Archeological Survey


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MORE BOOK INFO
ISBN: 0817315799
ISBN(13-digit): 9780817315795
Dewey Decimal: 976.1/43
Library of Congress: 2007026077
Book Publisher: Univ of Alabama Pr
Language: ENG
No. of Pages: 171



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