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Tradition Brought to the Surface: Continuity,...
Journal article

Tradition Brought to the Surface: Continuity, Innovation and Change in the Late Formative Period, Taraco Peninsula, Bolivia

Abstract

Based on more than a decade of research on the Taraco Peninsula, Titicaca Basin, Bolivia, we discuss the role of memory, tradition and ancestral participation from the earliest settled communities to the founding and influence of the Tiwanaku order. We examine the shifting role of social memory vis-à-vis public ceremonies, pottery and food production. While the earlier phases give a sense of familial community and the construction of place through ancestor veneration, the later phases suggest stronger lineage commemoration, with families acting as gravitational forces in the burgeoning political developments. Our diachronic study on the Taraco Peninsula tracks these practices illustrating the movement along a discursive–non-discursive continuum, with some practices brought to the surface and politicized.

Authors

Roddick AP; Hastorf CA

Journal

Cambridge Archaeological Journal, Vol. 20, No. 2, pp. 157–178

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Publication Date

June 1, 2010

DOI

10.1017/s0959774310000211

ISSN

0959-7743
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