The Pueblo Revolt and the mythology of conquest : an indigenous archaeology of contact /

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Wilcox, Michael V. (Michael Vincent), 1967-
Imprint:Berkeley : University of California Press, c2009.
Description:xiv, 316 p. : ill., maps ; 24 cm.
Language:English
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/7892314
Hidden Bibliographic Details
ISBN:9780520252059 (cloth : alk. paper)
0520252055 (cloth : alk. paper)
Notes:Includes bibliographical references and index.
Table of Contents:
  • Preface
  • 1. Repatriating History: Indigenous Archaeology and the Pueblo Revolt of 1680
  • Cochiti, New Mexico
  • Reversing the Terminal Narrative: Understanding
  • the Persistence of Indigenous Traditions
  • From Colonial to Postcolonial to Indigenous Archaeology
  • Rethinking Acculturation and Demographic Collapse:
  • Puebloan Resistance and Rebellion in Context
  • Toward the Development of an Indigenous Archaeology
  • Nondestructive Methods and Historical Materials
  • Definition of Terminology
  • Area of Study
  • Organization of the Book
  • 2. Creating the Invisible Indian
  • Making a Myth out of Colonial Violence: Invoking the Black Legend
  • Triumphalist Revisionism and the Birth of the Borderlands:
  • Bandelier, Lummis, and the Boltonian Tradition
  • Narrating Demographic Collapse: The Berkeley School and Disease as the Agent of Destruction
  • The New Archaeology and the End of Indian Histories
  • Acculturation and Culture Contact: Archaeologies of Ethnicity
  • 3. Explaining the Persistence of Indian Cultures: Ethnicity Theory, Social Distance, and the Myth of Acculturation
  • Toward a Sociology of Culture: The Chicago School and the Rhodes Livingstone Institute
  • History, Culture, and Conflict: The RLI. and the Copper Belt Studies
  • Acculturation and Change: Cultural Units and the Problems of the Comparative Approach
  • Ethnic Groups and Boundaries
  • Diacritica: The Signals of Social Distance
  • Conflict Theories: The Source of Resistance and Change
  • Responses to Subordination: Assimilation and Conflict
  • 4. The Mythologies of Conquest: Militarizing Jesus, Slavery, and Rebellion in the Spanish Borderlands
  • The Power of Naming: The Birth of the Spaniard and the Indian
  • Creating Indian and Spaniard as Social Categories
  • Militarizing Jesus
  • "Unjust, Scandalous, Irrational and Absurd": The Requerimiento, Silver, Slavery, and Rebellion on the Colonial Frontier
  • 5. Abandonment as Social Strategy: Colonial Violence and the Pueblo Response
  • Language and Communication as Social Boundary
  • The Coronado Entrada: 1540-1542
  • The Chamuscado-Rodríguez Entrada: 1581-1582
  • The Espejo Entrada: 1582-1583
  • Castaño de Sosa-Morlete Entradas:1590-1591
  • Permanent Colonization: The Don Juan de Oñate Entrada of '1598
  • Colonial Period Conflicts: New Mexico 1610-1680
  • Missionary Efforts: Forcible Conversion and Native Resistance
  • Church and State Conflicts in the l600s
  • The Ethnogenesis of the Pan Indian Movement in New Mexico: Prerevolt Movements in the Seventeenth Century
  • Social Violence, Mobility, and Disease: A Colonial Mythology in Need of Critical Reanalysis
  • 6. "Seek and You Shall Find": Mobility as Social Strategy: Documenting Evidence of Contact and Revolt Period Settlements
  • The Development of Pan-Puebloan Consciousness and the Revolt of 1680
  • Analysis and Implications: The Development and Demise of the Pan-Puebloan Movement
  • Environmental Setting: Drainage Systems and Geologic Formations
  • Faunal and Floral Resources
  • Archaeological Resources in the Upper Rio Grande: Mission Studies as a Proxy for Puebloan Communities
  • Archaeological Approaches to Precontact Settlement Shifts in the Pueblo Region
  • Early Archaeological Studies in the Jemez Mountains
  • Historic Period Ceramics: Chronological Frameworks of the Rio Grande Glazewares, Jemez, and Tewa Series
  • Historic Period Villages in the Jemez Region: Site Descriptions and Analysis
  • Jemez Region Historic Period Site Information
  • Conclusions
  • 7. The Archaeological Correlates of Ethnogenesis: Community Building at Old Cochiti
  • Site Description
  • Cochiti Oral History: Migrations and Pueblo-Spanish Relations
  • Historical Background: Old Cochiti in the Colonial Spanish Documents
  • Previous Archaeological Research
  • Architectural Information and Analysis: LA 29s and LA 84
  • Reevaluating Community Definitions: LA 84 LA 295 Mapping Project
  • Discussion and Conclusions: Social Boundaries at the Site Level
  • 8. Repatriating Old Cochiti
  • Implications Archaeological and Historical
  • Notes
  • References
  • Index