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Religion On The Rocks Hohokam Rock Art Ritual Practice And Social Transformation Aaron M Wright

  • SKU: BELL-43427912
Religion On The Rocks Hohokam Rock Art Ritual Practice And Social Transformation Aaron M Wright
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Religion On The Rocks Hohokam Rock Art Ritual Practice And Social Transformation Aaron M Wright instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Utah Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 43.48 MB
Author: Aaron M. Wright
ISBN: 9781607813644, 1607813645
Language: English
Year: 2014

Product desciption

Religion On The Rocks Hohokam Rock Art Ritual Practice And Social Transformation Aaron M Wright by Aaron M. Wright 9781607813644, 1607813645 instant download after payment.

We are nearly all intrigued by the petroglyphs and pictographs of the American Southwest, and we commonly ask what they “mean”. Religion on the Rocks redirects our attention to the equally important matter of what compelled ancient peoples to craft rock art in the first place. To examine this question, Aaron Wright presents a case study from Arizona's South Mountains, an area once flanked by several densely populated Hohokam villages. Synthesizing results from recent archaeological surveys, he explores how the mountains' petroglyphs were woven into the broader cultural landscape and argues that the petroglyphs are relics of a bygone ritual system in which people vied for prestige and power by controlling religious knowledge. The features and strategic placement of the rock art suggest this dimension of Hohokam ritual was participatory and prominent in village life. Around AD 1100, however, petroglyph creation and other ritual practices began to wane, denoting a broad transformation of the Hohokam social world. Wright’s examination of the South Mountains petroglyphs offers a novel narrative of how Hohokam villagers negotiated a concentration of politico-religious authority around platform mounds. Readers will come away with a better understanding of the Hohokam legacy and a greater appreciation for rock art's value to anthropology.

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