The Oxford Handbook of the Olmecs provides an up-to-date overview of research on this most elaborate of Mesoamerica's foundational cultures (ca. 1450-400 BCE). Few objects of study have sparked more debate in Mesoamerican studies than the role of Olmec culture in the origins of that region's civilizations, with some seeing it as the mother from which all significant cultural developments sprang and others as one of several "sister cultures," each contributing substantially to the emergence of civilization. While acknowledging this debate, this volume moves beyond it with framing articles that…mehr
The Oxford Handbook of the Olmecs provides an up-to-date overview of research on this most elaborate of Mesoamerica's foundational cultures (ca. 1450-400 BCE). Few objects of study have sparked more debate in Mesoamerican studies than the role of Olmec culture in the origins of that region's civilizations, with some seeing it as the mother from which all significant cultural developments sprang and others as one of several "sister cultures," each contributing substantially to the emergence of civilization. While acknowledging this debate, this volume moves beyond it with framing articles that discuss the theoretical and social significance of Olmec research, as well as empirical summaries of recent archaeological, art-historical, archaeometric, and environmental research. It also presents topical perspectives on Olmec economy, society, polity, and belief, in addition to forward-looking articles that review the current state and future directions of Olmec research. Part I introduces the volume with articles on the history of Olmec studies, the theoretical importance of Olmec archaeology, and a review of longstanding debates over Olmec origins. Part II presents recent research on the ecology of the tropical lowland environment and regional settlement pattern studies, while Part III digs deeper into the archaeological record with summaries of recent excavations at key sites in Olman--the "Olmec heartland"-and beyond. Part IV looks beyond the Gulf Coast with up-to-date summaries of the Formative archaeological records in other parts of Mesoamerica, focusing on the local character and social context of participation in interregional networks. Together, Parts II, III, and IV lay the empirical basis for the topical essays that follow in Part V on Olmec subsistence, economy, society, governance, and artistic expression. The volume closes with three comparative articles that reconsider the place of the Olmecs in Mesoamerican studies and anthropological archaeology. The result is one of the most comprehensive and wide-ranging volumes on the Olmec in recent decades.
Christopher A. Pool is University Research Professor in Anthropology at the University of Kentucky. His previous books include Olmec Archaeology and Early Mesoamerica, The Oxford Handbook of Mesoamerican Archaeology (co-edited with Deborah L. Nichols), and Settlement Archaeology and Political Economy at Tres Zapotes Veracruz. Carl J. Wendt is Professor of Anthropology in the Division of Anthropology at California State University, Fullerton.
Inhaltsangabe
* 1. Introduction: Recent Trends in Olmec Studies * Christopher A. Pool and Carl J. Wendt * Part I: Framing the Olmecs in History, Theory, and Heritage * 2. The History of Olmec Studies, 1862-2020: Confusion, Contention, and Consensus * Richard A. Diehl * 3. The Olmecs and Archaeological Theory * Rosemary A. Joyce * 4. Olmec Origins: One by Land, Two by Sea * Richard A. Diehl * Part II: Environment and Formative Settlement Patterns in Olman * 5. Overview: Environment, Polity, and Regional Variation in Olmec Settlement * Christopher A. Pool * 6. Formative Settlement in the San Lorenzo Region: * Roberto Lunagómez Reyes * 7. Preclassic Settlement in the La Venta Region * William F. Rust * 8. The Eastern Olmec: Refining Regional Cultural and Landscape Chronologies During the Epoch of the Hallstatt Plateau * Christopher L. von Nagy * 9. Formative Settlement in the San Juan Drainage and Tuxtlas Piedmont * Hirokazu Kotegawa * 10. Formative Settlement in the Tuxtla Mountains * Lourdes Budar and Philip J. Arnold, III * 11. Formative Settlement on the Western Margin of Olman * Michael L. Loughlin and Christopher A. Pool * Part III: Site-Level Explorations * 12. San Andrés and the Archaic Antecedents of Olmec Culture * Mary DeLand Pohl, David L. Lentz, Christopher L. von Nagy, Dolores R. Piperno, Lisa Duff, and Kevin O. Pope. * 13. Pre-Olmec and Olmec Rituals and Settlements of the Lower Coatzacoalcos River Basin, Veracruz * Maria del Carmen Rodríguez, Ponciano Ortiz Ceballos, and Alberto Ortiz Brito * 14. San Lorenzo: The First Olmec Center * Carl J. Wendt * 15. The Cantón Corralito Colony: Two Centuries of Gulf Olmecs Abroad * David Cheetham * 16. Discovering La Venta: A Century of Research * Rebecca González Lauck * 17. Arroyo Pesquero: A Middle Formative Olmec Ritual Cache * Carl J. Wendt * 18. Olmec Horizons at Chiapa de Corzo * Bruce R. Bachand * 19. Quiotepec-Oxtotitlan: Olmec in Guerrero? When? * Paul Schmidt, Christopher L. von Nagy, Mary DeLand Pohl, and Eliseo F. Padilla Gutiérrez * 20. La Joya, Veracruz: Lessons from an "Alternative Olmec" * Philip J. Arnold, III * 21. Tres Zapotes: A Resilient Center in Western Olman * Christopher A. Pool * Part IV: Regional Perspectives from Beyond Olman * 22. Early and Middle Formative Interactions and Central Mexico * Wesley D. Stoner and Deborah L. Nichols * 23. The Olmec Phenomenon in Morelos * Mario Córdoba Tello, Jaime F. Reséndiz Machón, and Giselle Canto Aguilar * 24. The Mixteca Alta * Andrew Balkansky and María T. Palomares Rodríguez * 25. What is Olmec in Guerrero? * Gerardo Gutiérrez and Mary E. Pye * 26. The Valley of Oaxaca and the Southern Isthmus * Marcus Winter * 27. Early and Middle Formative Settlement and Society in the Chiapas Central Depression * Timothy D. Sullivan * 28. Olmecs in Soconusco * John E. Clark * 29. Pacific Coast of Guatemala * Michael Love and Julia Guernsey * 30. The Olmec and the Origins of Maya Civilization * George J. Bey, III * 31. Central America * Rosemary A. Joyce and John S. Henderson * Part V: Perspectives on Olmec Economy, Society, and Ritual * Section I: Living and Making * 32. The Olmec Diet * Amber M. VanDerwarker and Tanya M. Perez * 35. Of Cabbages and Kings: Gulf Olmec Subsistence Strategies * Philip J. Arnold, III and Thomas W. Killion * 34. Ceramic Crafting: Early Olmec Style Pottery * Jeffrey P. Blomster, David Cheetham, and Christopher A. Pool * 35. Chipped Stone Procurement, Technology, and Use * Charles L.F. Knight * 36. Ground Stone Manufacture and Lapidary Carving * Olaf Jaime-Riverón (¿) * 37. Bitumen Procurement, Processing, and Use * Carl J. Wendt * Section 2: Meaning, Expression, and Ritual * 38. Mortuary Practices during the Preclassic Period * Vera Tiesler and Mónica Rodríguez Pérez * 39. Monumental Sculpture * Jill Mollenhauer * 40. The Human Form in Portable Art: Figurines, Masks, and Busts * Christopher A. Pool * 41. Iconography and Religion * Karl A. Taube * 42. The Case for Olmec Writing * Stephen D. Houston * 43. Sacred Landscape: Architecture, Cosmology, Ritual * Carolyn E. Tate * Section 3: Organization, Interaction, and Power * 44. Rural Residences in the San Lorenzo Hinterland * Robert Kruger and Carl J. Wendt * 45. Sex and Gender in Olmec Imagery * Billie Follensbee * 46. Olmec Exchange Networks * Hector Neff. Jeffrey P. Blomster, and Michael Glascock, and Wesley D. Stoner * 47. Olmec Political Economies * John E. Clark * Part VI: Reconsidering the Olmecs for the Future * 48. A View from Olman: Where Do We Go from Here? * Carl J. Wendt * 49. Some Anthropological Questions for the Future of Olmec Archaeology * Robert Rosenswig * 50. The Olmecs in Global Context * Robert C. Drennan, C. Adam Berrey, and Christian E. Peterson
* 1. Introduction: Recent Trends in Olmec Studies * Christopher A. Pool and Carl J. Wendt * Part I: Framing the Olmecs in History, Theory, and Heritage * 2. The History of Olmec Studies, 1862-2020: Confusion, Contention, and Consensus * Richard A. Diehl * 3. The Olmecs and Archaeological Theory * Rosemary A. Joyce * 4. Olmec Origins: One by Land, Two by Sea * Richard A. Diehl * Part II: Environment and Formative Settlement Patterns in Olman * 5. Overview: Environment, Polity, and Regional Variation in Olmec Settlement * Christopher A. Pool * 6. Formative Settlement in the San Lorenzo Region: * Roberto Lunagómez Reyes * 7. Preclassic Settlement in the La Venta Region * William F. Rust * 8. The Eastern Olmec: Refining Regional Cultural and Landscape Chronologies During the Epoch of the Hallstatt Plateau * Christopher L. von Nagy * 9. Formative Settlement in the San Juan Drainage and Tuxtlas Piedmont * Hirokazu Kotegawa * 10. Formative Settlement in the Tuxtla Mountains * Lourdes Budar and Philip J. Arnold, III * 11. Formative Settlement on the Western Margin of Olman * Michael L. Loughlin and Christopher A. Pool * Part III: Site-Level Explorations * 12. San Andrés and the Archaic Antecedents of Olmec Culture * Mary DeLand Pohl, David L. Lentz, Christopher L. von Nagy, Dolores R. Piperno, Lisa Duff, and Kevin O. Pope. * 13. Pre-Olmec and Olmec Rituals and Settlements of the Lower Coatzacoalcos River Basin, Veracruz * Maria del Carmen Rodríguez, Ponciano Ortiz Ceballos, and Alberto Ortiz Brito * 14. San Lorenzo: The First Olmec Center * Carl J. Wendt * 15. The Cantón Corralito Colony: Two Centuries of Gulf Olmecs Abroad * David Cheetham * 16. Discovering La Venta: A Century of Research * Rebecca González Lauck * 17. Arroyo Pesquero: A Middle Formative Olmec Ritual Cache * Carl J. Wendt * 18. Olmec Horizons at Chiapa de Corzo * Bruce R. Bachand * 19. Quiotepec-Oxtotitlan: Olmec in Guerrero? When? * Paul Schmidt, Christopher L. von Nagy, Mary DeLand Pohl, and Eliseo F. Padilla Gutiérrez * 20. La Joya, Veracruz: Lessons from an "Alternative Olmec" * Philip J. Arnold, III * 21. Tres Zapotes: A Resilient Center in Western Olman * Christopher A. Pool * Part IV: Regional Perspectives from Beyond Olman * 22. Early and Middle Formative Interactions and Central Mexico * Wesley D. Stoner and Deborah L. Nichols * 23. The Olmec Phenomenon in Morelos * Mario Córdoba Tello, Jaime F. Reséndiz Machón, and Giselle Canto Aguilar * 24. The Mixteca Alta * Andrew Balkansky and María T. Palomares Rodríguez * 25. What is Olmec in Guerrero? * Gerardo Gutiérrez and Mary E. Pye * 26. The Valley of Oaxaca and the Southern Isthmus * Marcus Winter * 27. Early and Middle Formative Settlement and Society in the Chiapas Central Depression * Timothy D. Sullivan * 28. Olmecs in Soconusco * John E. Clark * 29. Pacific Coast of Guatemala * Michael Love and Julia Guernsey * 30. The Olmec and the Origins of Maya Civilization * George J. Bey, III * 31. Central America * Rosemary A. Joyce and John S. Henderson * Part V: Perspectives on Olmec Economy, Society, and Ritual * Section I: Living and Making * 32. The Olmec Diet * Amber M. VanDerwarker and Tanya M. Perez * 35. Of Cabbages and Kings: Gulf Olmec Subsistence Strategies * Philip J. Arnold, III and Thomas W. Killion * 34. Ceramic Crafting: Early Olmec Style Pottery * Jeffrey P. Blomster, David Cheetham, and Christopher A. Pool * 35. Chipped Stone Procurement, Technology, and Use * Charles L.F. Knight * 36. Ground Stone Manufacture and Lapidary Carving * Olaf Jaime-Riverón (¿) * 37. Bitumen Procurement, Processing, and Use * Carl J. Wendt * Section 2: Meaning, Expression, and Ritual * 38. Mortuary Practices during the Preclassic Period * Vera Tiesler and Mónica Rodríguez Pérez * 39. Monumental Sculpture * Jill Mollenhauer * 40. The Human Form in Portable Art: Figurines, Masks, and Busts * Christopher A. Pool * 41. Iconography and Religion * Karl A. Taube * 42. The Case for Olmec Writing * Stephen D. Houston * 43. Sacred Landscape: Architecture, Cosmology, Ritual * Carolyn E. Tate * Section 3: Organization, Interaction, and Power * 44. Rural Residences in the San Lorenzo Hinterland * Robert Kruger and Carl J. Wendt * 45. Sex and Gender in Olmec Imagery * Billie Follensbee * 46. Olmec Exchange Networks * Hector Neff. Jeffrey P. Blomster, and Michael Glascock, and Wesley D. Stoner * 47. Olmec Political Economies * John E. Clark * Part VI: Reconsidering the Olmecs for the Future * 48. A View from Olman: Where Do We Go from Here? * Carl J. Wendt * 49. Some Anthropological Questions for the Future of Olmec Archaeology * Robert Rosenswig * 50. The Olmecs in Global Context * Robert C. Drennan, C. Adam Berrey, and Christian E. Peterson
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