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Southeast Inka Frontiers Boundaries And Interactions Sonia Alconini

  • SKU: BELL-5742136
Southeast Inka Frontiers Boundaries And Interactions Sonia Alconini
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Southeast Inka Frontiers Boundaries And Interactions Sonia Alconini instant download after payment.

Publisher: University Press of Florida
File Extension: PDF
File size: 16.65 MB
Pages: 248
Author: Sonia Alconini
ISBN: 9780813062914, 0813062918
Language: English
Year: 2016

Product desciption

Southeast Inka Frontiers Boundaries And Interactions Sonia Alconini by Sonia Alconini 9780813062914, 0813062918 instant download after payment.

Imperial frontiers are a fascinating stage for studying the interactions of people, institutions, and their environments. In this volume, Sonia Alconini examines a part of present-day Bolivia that was once a territory at the edge of the Inka empire. Along this frontier, the Inka, one of the New World’s most powerful polities, came into repeated conflict with tropical lowland groups like the Gauraní-speaking Chiriguano. In response, the Inkas constructed a militarized frontier, which has for the most part been oversimplified in ethnohistorical accounts that frequently portray the Inka as a civilized empire resisting invasion by “savage and barbarian” groups.
Using extensive field research, Alconini explores the modes of direct contact between the Inkas and eastern tropical lowland populations, a situation often overlooked in studies of the area. Combining regional- and household-level perspectives, she studies the empire’s impact on local settlements as well as on domestic economy, production, cultural materials, and labor organization. She recognizes the frontier as a nexus between Inka, local, and lowland populations, describing the broader multifaceted socioeconomic processes occurring across the territory. This unprecedented study shows how the Inka empire exercised control over vast expanses of land in a location hundreds of miles away from the capital city of Cusco and how people on the frontier navigated the cultural and environmental divide that separated the Andes and the Amazon.

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