Description
Book SynopsisThe Andes are of unquestioned significance to the human story: a cradle of agriculture and of ''pristine'' civilisation with a pedigree of millennia. The Incas were but the culmination of a succession of civilisations that rose and fell to leave one of the richest archaeological records on Earth. By no coincidence, the Andes are home also to our greatest surviving link to the speech of the New World before European conquest: the Quechua language family. For linguists, the native tongues of the Andes make for another rich seam of data on origins, expansions and reversals throughout prehistory. Historians and anthropologists, meanwhile, negotiate many pitfalls to interpret the conflicting mytho-histories of the Andes, recorded for us only through the distorting prism of the conquistadors'' world-view.Each of these disciplines opens up its own partial window on the past: very different perspectives, to be sure, but all the more complementary for it. Frustratingly though, specialists in ea
Trade ReviewThis book offers a splendid conspectus of issues on many aspects of the Andean past and provides a blueprint for the questions which further researchers should explore. Further examination of such questions will henceforth be unthinkable without students of the topic examining this rich and diverse collection of handsomely-edited papers. * Anthony Grant, Edge Hill University *
Table of ContentsIntroduction - Archaeology and Language in the Andes: A Much-Needed Conversation ; Archaeology and Language in the Andes: Some General Models of Change ; Broadening Our Horizons: Towards an Interdisciplinary Prehistory of the Andes ; Modelling the Quechua-Aymara Relationship: Sociolinguistic Scenarios and Possible Archaeological Evidence ; On the Origins of Social Complexity in the Central Andes and Possible Linguistic Correlations ; Central Andean Language Expansion and the Chavin Sphere of Interaction ; The 1st Millennium ad in North Central Peru: Critical Perspectives on a Linguistic Prehistory ; Cajamarca Quechua and the Expansion of the Huari State 155 ; Middle Horizon Imperialism and the Prehistoric Dispersal of Andean Languages ; Indicators of Possible Driving Forces for the Spread of Quechua and Aymara Reflected in the Archaeology of Cuzco ; Unravelling the Enigma of the 'Particular Language' of the Incas ; Accounting for the Spread of Quechua and Aymara Between Cuzco and Lake Titicaca ; The Herder-Cultivator Relationship as a Paradigm for Archaeological Origins, Linguistic Dispersals and the Evolution of Record Keeping in the Andes ; How did Quechua Reach Ecuador? ; Quechua's Southern Boundary: The Case of Santiago del Estero, Argentina ; Conclusion - A Cross-Disciplinary Prehistory for the Andes? ; Surveying the State of the Art