000718135 000__ 03612cam\a2200469\i\4500 000718135 001__ 718135 000718135 005__ 20210515102642.0 000718135 008__ 150402s2014\\\\nmuab\\\\b\\\\001\0\eng\\ 000718135 010__ $$a 2013013561 000718135 019__ $$a881831963$$a898228161 000718135 020__ $$a9781938645105$$qpaperback 000718135 020__ $$a1938645103$$qpaperback 000718135 020__ $$a9781938645334$$qhardcover 000718135 020__ $$a1938645332$$qhardcover 000718135 035__ $$a(OCoLC)ocn840927781 000718135 035__ $$a718135 000718135 040__ $$aDLC$$beng$$erda$$cDLC$$dYDXCP$$dBTCTA$$dIPU$$dCHVBK$$dYUS$$dZLM$$dMNA$$dISE 000718135 042__ $$apcc 000718135 043__ $$an-ust-- 000718135 049__ $$aISEA 000718135 05000 $$aE99.P9$$bW34 2014 000718135 08200 $$a979.004/974$$223 000718135 1001_ $$aWare, John A.$$q(John Allen) 000718135 24512 $$aA Pueblo social history :$$bkinship, sodality, and community in the northern southwest /$$cJohn A. Ware. 000718135 250__ $$aFirst edition. 000718135 264_1 $$aSanta Fe, New Mexico :$$bSchool for Advanced Research Press,$$c[2014] 000718135 300__ $$axxvii, 241 pages :$$billustrations, maps ;$$c26 cm. 000718135 336__ $$atext$$2rdacontent 000718135 337__ $$aunmediated$$2rdamedia 000718135 338__ $$avolume$$2rdacarrier 000718135 4901_ $$aResident scholar series 000718135 504__ $$aIncludes bibliographical references (pages 203-227) and index. 000718135 5050_ $$aList of figures and tables -- Foreword: John Ware's A Pueblo social history / Timothy Earle -- Preface -- Introduction -- Pueblos and anthropologists -- Descent group, sodality, community -- Pueblo worlds -- Pithouse to Pueblo: the organization of early Pueblo communities -- Eastern Pueblo trajectories: five centuries of change in the core San Juan Region -- After Chaco: Pueblo III in the core and on the periphery -- Late prehistoric and early historic Pueblo worlds -- Concluding thoughts and conjectures -- Notes -- References -- Index. 000718135 520__ $$a"A Pueblo Social History explores the intersection of archaeology, ethnohistory, and ethnology. Ware argues that all of the key Pueblo social, ceremonial, and political institutions--and their relative importance across the Pueblo world--can only be explained in terms of indigenous social history stretching back nearly two millennia. He shows that the principal community organizations of the Pueblos emerged for the first time nearly thirteen hundred years ago, and that the interaction of these organizations would forge most of the unique social practices and institutions described in the historical Pueblo ethnographies." -- Publisher's website. 000718135 5201_ $$a"A Pueblo Social History is a brilliant tour de force about the archaeology and ethnography of the American Southwest. This thoroughly accessible work is a major contribution to the field with its penetrating analysis of the multifaceted historical connections between the Ancestral Pueblos and the contemporary Eastern and Western Pueblos. John Ware raises a number of significant theoretical and methodological issues about the study of past communities that reach well beyond the borders of the Southwest. This provocative book is a must read for anyone interested in ancient kinship-based organizations, ritual sodalities, community-level architecture, ethnographies as historical destinations, and cutting-edge, holistic approaches to anthropology." -- Kent G. Lightfoot, University of California, Berkeley. 000718135 650_0 $$aPueblo Indians$$xKinship. 000718135 650_0 $$aPueblo Indians$$xHistoriography. 000718135 650_0 $$aPueblo Indians$$xSocial life and customs. 000718135 650_0 $$aEthnoarchaeology$$zSouthwest, New. 000718135 650_0 $$aSocial archaeology$$zSouthwest, New. 000718135 651_0 $$aSouthwest, New$$xAntiquities. 000718135 830_0 $$aSchool for Advanced Research resident scholar series. 000718135 85200 $$bgen$$hE99.P9$$iW34$$i2014 000718135 909CO $$ooai:library.usi.edu:718135$$pGLOBAL_SET 000718135 980__ $$aBIB 000718135 980__ $$aBOOK