1st Edition

Peruvian Archaeology A Critical History

By Henry Tantaleán Copyright 2014
    215 Pages
    by Routledge

    216 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book offers a unique, critical perspective on the history of Peruvian archaeology by a native scholar. Leading Peruvian archaeologist Henry Tantaleán illuminates the cultural legacy of colonialism beginning with “founding father” Max Uhle and traces key developments to the present. These include the growth of Peruvian institutions; major figures from Tello and Valcárcel to Larco, Rowe, and Murra; war, political upheaval, and Peruvian regimes; developments in archaeological and social science theory as they impacted Andean archaeology; and modern concerns such as heritage, neoliberalism, and privatization. This post-colonial perspective on research and its sociopolitical context is an essential contribution to Andean archaeology and the growing international dialogue on the history of archaeology.

    Introduction: The Crisscrossed Past; Chapter 1 The Beginnings of Archaeology in Peru; Chapter 2 The (Western) Foundation of Peruvian Archaeology: Max Uhle and Cultural Evolutionism; Chapter 3 Archaeology and Nationalism in the 1920s: Julio C. Tello and Peruvian Culture; Chapter 4 Indigenismo in the Ancient Capital of the Incas: The Cusqueño Period of Luis Valcárcel; Chapter 5 North American Influence in the 1940s: Rafael Larco Hoyle and the Virú Project; Chapter 6 New Horizons In Peruvian Archaeology: John H. Rowe And The Berkeley School; Chapter 7 Ethnohistory and Archaeology in the 1960s: John Murra’s Influence in Peru; Chapter 8 Archaeology as Social Science: From Gordon Childe to Luis Lumbreras; Chapter 9 Processualist Archaeology in Peru: Emergence and Development; Chapter 10 Archaeology in 1990s Peru: A View from Lima; Chapter 11 Peruvian Archaeology at the Beginning of the Twenty-First Century: Boom and Bust; concl Conclusion: New Horizons for Peruvian Archaeology in a Globalized World;

    Biography

    Tantaleán, Henry