Setting Theoretical Egos Aside: Issues and Theory in North American Archaeology

Theory in North American archaeology is characterized in terms of foci and approaches manifested in research issues, rather than in explicit or oppositional theoretical positions. While there are some clear-cut theoretical perspectives—evolutionary ecology, behavioral archaeology, and Darwinian archaeology—a large majority of North American archaeology fits a broad category here called “processual-plus.” Among the major themes that crosscut many or all of the approaches are interests in gender, agency/practice, symbols and meaning, material culture, and native perspectives. Gender archaeology is paradigmatic of processual-plus archaeology, in that it draws on a diversity of theoretical approaches to address a common issue. Emphasis on agency and practice is an important development, though conceptions of agency are too often linked to Western ideas of individuals and motivation. The vast majority of North American archaeology, including postprocessual approaches, is modern, not postmodern, in orientation. The relative dearth of theoretical argument positively contributes to diversity and dialogue, but it also may cause North American theory to receive inadequate attention and unfortunate misunderstandings of postmodernism.

[1]  E. Brumfiel Distinguished Lecture in Archeology: Breaking and Entering the Ecosystem—Gender, Class, and Faction Steal the Show , 1992 .

[2]  Ben A. Nelson,et al.  Complexity, Hierarchy, and Scale: A Controlled Comparison between Chaco Canyon, New Mexico, and La Quemada, Zacatecas , 1995, American Antiquity.

[3]  Timothy A. Kohler,et al.  Long-Term Anasazi Land Use and Forest Reduction: A Case Study from Southwest Colorado , 1988, American Antiquity.

[4]  J. Sabloff,et al.  A history of American archaeology , 1974 .

[5]  M. Nelson,et al.  Understanding Abandonments in the North American Southwest , 2002 .

[6]  P. Bourdieu The Logic of Practice , 1990 .

[7]  D. Asch,et al.  Sod Blocks in Illinois Hopewell Mounds , 2001, American Antiquity.

[8]  P. Crown,et al.  Gender and Status in the Hohokam Pre‐Classic to Classic Transition , 1996 .

[9]  Frank L. Cowan Making Sense of Flake Scatters: Lithic Technological Strategies and Mobility , 1999, American Antiquity.

[10]  J. Blitz Mississippian Chiefdoms and the Fission-Fusion Process , 1999, American Antiquity.

[11]  Lewis R. Binford,et al.  Where Do Research Problems Come From? , 2001, American Antiquity.

[12]  S. Elias,et al.  The Residues of Feasting and Public Ritual at Early Cahokia , 2002, American Antiquity.

[13]  W A LONGACRE,et al.  Archeology as Anthropology: A Case Study , 1964, Science.

[14]  C. Cameron Migration and the Movement of Southwestern Peoples , 1995 .

[15]  P. Lambert Man corn: Cannibalism and violence in the prehistoric american southwest , 2002 .

[16]  A. Wylie,et al.  Critical Traditions in Contemporary Archaeology: Essays in the Philosophy, History and Socio-Politics of Archaeology , 1995 .

[17]  G. Fritz Gender and the Early Cultivation of Gourds in Eastern North America , 1999, American Antiquity.

[18]  M. J. O’Brien,et al.  Basic Incompatibilities between Evolutionary and Behavioral Archaeology , 1998, American Antiquity.

[19]  James N. Hill Broken K Pueblo: Prehistoric Social Organization in the American Southwest , 1971 .

[20]  D. J. Meltzer,et al.  On the Pleistocene Antiquity of Monte Verde, Southern Chile , 1997, American Antiquity.

[21]  M. Schiffer Some Relationships between Behavioral and Evolutionary Archaeologies , 1996, American Antiquity.

[22]  Charles L. Redman,et al.  Explanation in archaeology : an explicitly scientific approach , 1972 .

[23]  Michael Shanks,et al.  Re-Constructing Archaeology: Theory and Practice , 1987 .

[24]  J. Blitz Big Pots for Big Shots: Feasting and Storage in a Mississippian Community , 1993, American Antiquity.

[25]  C. Spencer Evolutionary approaches in archaeology , 1997 .

[26]  C. Redman,et al.  Placing Archaeology at the Center of Socio-Natural Studies , 2002, American Antiquity.

[27]  S. Leblanc,et al.  Short-term sedentism in the American Southwest : the Mimbres Valley Salado , 1989 .

[28]  Lewis R. Binford,et al.  A Consideration of Archaeological Research Design , 1964, American Antiquity.

[29]  M. Munson Sex, Gender, and Status: Human Images from the Classic Mimbres , 2000, American Antiquity.

[30]  Joan M. Gero,et al.  Programme to Practice: Gender and Feminism in Archaeology , 1997 .

[31]  E. Charnov,et al.  The male's dilemma: Increased offspring production is more paternity to steal , 1995, Evolutionary Ecology.

[32]  W. Massey Anthropological papers of the University of Arizona , 1960 .

[33]  R. J. Mason Archaeology and Native North American Oral Traditions , 2000, American Antiquity.

[34]  M. Schiffer,et al.  Behavioral archaeology: toward a new synthesis , 2001 .

[35]  J. Kantner Political Competition among the Chaco Anasazi of the American Southwest , 1996 .

[36]  Katherine A. Spielmann,et al.  Migration and reorganization : the Pueblo IV period in the American Southwest , 1998 .

[37]  T. Pauketat The Ascent of Chiefs: Cahokia and Mississippian Politics in Native North America , 1994 .

[38]  Hector Neff,et al.  On Evolutionary Ecology and Evolutionary Archaeology: Some Common Ground?1 , 2000, Current Anthropology.

[39]  Charles L. Redman,et al.  Human Impact on Ancient Environments , 1999 .

[40]  S. Gillespie Personhood, Agency, and Mortuary Ritual: A Case Study from the Ancient Maya , 2001 .

[41]  Thomas C. Patterson,et al.  A History of Archaeological Thought. , 1991 .

[42]  David P. Braun Pots as Tools , 1983 .

[43]  S. Manson Simplifying complexity: a review of complexity theory , 2001 .

[44]  V. Steponaitis Ceramics, Chronology, and Community Patterns: An Archaeological Study at Moundville , 1980 .

[45]  Eric R. Wolf,et al.  Distinguished Lecture: Facing Power—Old Insights, New Questions , 1990 .

[46]  Gretchen Green What This Awl Means: Feminist Archaeology at a Wahpeton Dakota Village , 1994 .

[47]  R. Dunnell Evolutionary Theory and Archaeology , 1980 .

[48]  M. Schiffer Social Theory In Archaeology , 2000 .

[49]  N. Yoffee Archaeological theory: who sets the agenda?: Too many chiefs? (or, Safe texts for the '90s) , 1993 .

[50]  S. Frankenstein,et al.  The Internal Structure and Regional Context of Early Iron Age Society in South-Western Germany , 1978 .

[51]  S. Plog Equality and Hierarchy , 1995 .

[52]  P. Richerson,et al.  Culture and the Evolutionary Process , 1988 .

[53]  J. Sackett Approaches to style in lithic archaeology , 1982 .

[54]  J. Knight Some Speculations On Mississippian Monsters , 1984 .

[55]  Ian Hodder,et al.  Reading the past , 1986 .

[56]  Peter M. Whiteley Archaeology and Oral Tradition: The Scientific Importance of Dialogue , 2002, American Antiquity.

[57]  T. Earle Chiefdoms: Power, Economy, And Ideology , 1993 .

[58]  G. Odell Research Problems R Us , 2001, American Antiquity.

[59]  H. Delcourt,et al.  Prehistoric Human Use of Fire, the Eastern Agricultural Complex, and Appalachian Oak-Chestnut Forests: Paleoecology of Cliff Palace Pond, Kentucky , 1998, American Antiquity.

[60]  S. Shennan Archaeological theory: who sets the agenda?: After social evolution: a new archaeological agenda? , 1993 .

[61]  A. Byers,et al.  Intentionality, Symbolic Pragmatics, and Material Culture: Revisiting Binford’s View of the Old Copper Complex , 1999, American Antiquity.

[62]  Robert C. Dunnell,et al.  Style and Function: A Fundamental Dichotomy , 1978, American Antiquity.

[63]  Bruce D. Smith Rivers of Change: Essays on Early Agriculture in Eastern North America , 1992 .

[64]  R. Gould,et al.  Formation Processes of the Archaeological Record. , 1997 .

[65]  P. Minnis,et al.  Social Adaptation to Food Stress: A Prehistoric Southwestern Example , 1985 .

[66]  F. Jameson,et al.  Postmodernism, or, The Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism , 1992 .

[67]  J. O'connell,et al.  On Evolutionary Ecology, Selectionist Archaeology, and Behavioral Archaeology , 1999, American Antiquity.

[68]  G. Milner The Cahokia Chiefdom: The Archaeology of a Mississippian Society , 1998 .

[69]  R. Leonard,et al.  Population Aggregation in the Prehistoric American Southwest: A Selectionist Model , 1993, American Antiquity.

[70]  H. Shafer Architecture and Symbolism in Transitional Pueblo Development in the Mimbres Valley, SW NewMexico , 1995 .

[71]  P. Peregrine Matrilocality, Corporate Strategy, and the Organization of Production in the Chacoan World , 2001, American Antiquity.

[72]  L. Straus Solutrean Settlement of North America? A Review of Reality , 2000, American Antiquity.

[73]  M. Aldenderfer,et al.  Working Together: Native Americans and Archaeologists , 2000 .

[74]  T. Ferguson Native Americans and the Practice of Archaeology , 1996 .

[75]  Bettina Arnold,et al.  Gender and the Archaeology of Death , 2001 .

[76]  Timothy A. Kohler,et al.  Putting social sciences together again: an introduction to the volume , 2000 .

[77]  T. Emerson,et al.  Cahokia and the Archaeology of Power , 1999 .

[78]  Katherine A. Spielmann,et al.  Feasting, Craft Specialization, and the Ritual Mode of Production in Small‐Scale Societies , 2002 .

[79]  R. McGuire Archeology and the First Americans , 1992 .

[80]  P. Duke Working through theoretical tensions in contemporary archaeology: A practical attempt from southwestern Colorado , 1995 .

[81]  Barbara J. Mills,et al.  Recent Research on Chaco: Changing Views on Economy, Ritual, and Society , 2002 .

[82]  D. Rindos The origins of agriculture , 1984 .

[83]  R. Gould,et al.  Processual and Postprocessual Archaeologies: Multiple Ways of Knowing the Past@@@Recovering the Past , 1992 .

[84]  Barbara J. Mills,et al.  Alternative Leadership Strategies in the Prehispanic Southwest , 2000 .

[85]  Sherry B. Ortner Making Gender: The Politics and Erotics of Culture , 1996 .

[86]  Jane Peterson,et al.  Ceramic Production in the American Southwest , 1995 .

[87]  Charles R. Cobb Social Reproduction and the Longue Duree in the Prehistory of the Midcontinental United States , 1991 .

[88]  Colin Renfrew,et al.  Trajectory Discontinuity and Morphogenesis: The Implications of Catastrophe Theory for Archaeology , 1978, American Antiquity.

[89]  Scott R. Hutson Synergy through Disunity, Science as Social Practice: Comments on Vanpool and Vanpool , 2001, American Antiquity.

[90]  Wilford W. Spradlin,et al.  The Emergence of I , 1984 .

[91]  P. Watson,et al.  The Razor's Edge: Symbolic‐Structuralist Archeology and the Expansion of Archeological Inference , 1990 .

[92]  W. Durham The adaptive significance of cultural behavior , 1976 .

[93]  Brian Hayden Pathways to Power , 1995 .

[94]  C. B. Cohen,et al.  The Postmodernist Turn in Anthropology: Cautions from a Feminist Perspective , 1989, Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society.

[95]  Brian Hayden,et al.  Practical and prestige technologies: The evolution of material systems , 1998 .

[96]  A. Sherratt,et al.  Archaeological theory: who sets the agenda?: Contents , 1993 .

[97]  Allen Johnson,et al.  The evolution of human societies : from foraging group to agrarian state , 1988 .

[98]  T. Ferguson Historic Zuni Architecture and Society: An Archaeological Application of Space Syntax , 1996 .

[99]  Sherry B. Ortner Theory in Anthropology since the Sixties , 1984, Comparative Studies in Society and History.

[100]  Charles R. Cobb Archaeological Approaches to the Political Economy of Nonstratified Societies , 1993 .

[101]  Brian Hayden,et al.  The Plateau Interaction Sphere and Late Prehistoric Cultural Complexity , 1997, American Antiquity.

[102]  Dean J. Saitta,et al.  Agency, class, and archaeological interpretation , 1994 .

[103]  P. Wiessner The Vines of Complexity , 2002, Current Anthropology.

[104]  K. Dongoske,et al.  Critique of the Claim of Cannibalism at Cowboy Wash , 2000, American Antiquity.

[105]  J. Walthall Rockshelters and Hunter-Gatherer Adaptation to the Pleistocene/Holocene Transition , 1998, American Antiquity.

[106]  Michael Shanks,et al.  Social Theory And Archaeology , 1988 .

[107]  Timothy A. Kohler,et al.  Be there then: a modeling approach to settlement determinants and spatial efficiency among late ancestral pueblo populations of the Mesa Verde region, U.S. southwest , 2000 .

[108]  S. Vehik Conflict, Trade, and Political Development on the Southern Plains , 2002, American Antiquity.

[109]  I. Hodder Two Approaches to an Archaeology of the Social , 2002 .

[110]  Charles R. Cobb,et al.  Woodstock Culture and the Question of Mississippian Emergence , 1996, American Antiquity.

[111]  P. Walker,et al.  An Integrative Approach to Mortuary Analysis: Social and Symbolic Dimensions of Chumash Burial Practices , 2001, American Antiquity.

[112]  JANE H. Hill,et al.  Tepimans, Yumans, and Other Hohokam , 1998, American Antiquity.

[113]  Michael J. O'Brien,et al.  The Goals of Evolutionary Archaeology , 1998, Current Anthropology.

[114]  T. G.,et al.  Logic in Practice , 1934, Nature.

[115]  Richard Shusterman,et al.  Postmodernism, or, the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism , 1992 .

[116]  Keith H. Basso,et al.  Wisdom Sits in Places: Landscape and Language Among the Western Apache , 1996 .

[117]  T. Pauketat Monitoring Mississippian Homestead Occupation Span and Economy Using Ceramic Refuse , 1989, American Antiquity.

[118]  H. Maschner,et al.  Kin Selection and the Origins of Hereditary Social Inequality , 1996 .

[119]  D. Anthony Migration in Archeology: The Baby and the Bathwater , 1990 .

[120]  Timothy A. Kohler,et al.  Reciprocity and Its Limits: Considerations for a Study of the Pre-Hispanic Pueblo World , 1999 .

[121]  Michael E. Whalen,et al.  Architecture and Authority in the Casas Grandes Area, Chihuahua, Mexico , 2001, American Antiquity.

[122]  Michael D. Glascock,et al.  Production of San Juan Red Ware in the Northern Southwest: Insights into Regional Interaction in Early Puebloan Prehistory , 1997, American Antiquity.

[123]  P. Duke Archaeology, Annales , and ethnohistory: Braudel and North American archaeology: an example from the Northern Plains , 1992 .

[124]  C. Renfrew Production and Consumption in a Sacred Economy: The Material Correlates of High Devotional Expression at Chaco Canyon , 2001, American Antiquity.

[125]  David P. Braun Why decorate a pot? Midwestern household pottery, 200 B.C.-A.D.600 , 1991 .

[126]  Sian Jones,et al.  The Archaeology of Ethnicity: Constructing Identities in the Past and Present , 1997 .

[127]  L. Binford Willow Smoke and Dogs’ Tails: Hunter-Gatherer Settlement Systems and Archaeological Site Formation , 1980, American Antiquity.

[128]  A. Hallowell,et al.  Primitive Social Organization: An Evolutionary Perspective. , 1964 .

[129]  A. Duff,et al.  Ceramic Micro-Seriation: Types or Attributes? , 1996, American Antiquity.

[130]  Alison Wylie,et al.  The Interplay of Evidential Constraints and Political Interests: Recent Archaeological Research on Gender , 1992, American Antiquity.

[131]  David G. Anderson The Savannah River Chiefdoms: Political Change in the Late Prehistoric Southeast , 2005 .

[132]  R. McGuire Marxist Archaeology , 2002, Encyclopedic Dictionary of Archaeology.

[133]  B. Trigger,et al.  Archaeology and the Image of the American Indian , 1980, American Antiquity.

[134]  D. Whitley The art of the shaman : rock art of California , 2000 .

[135]  J. Buikstra,et al.  Centering the ancestors: Cemeteries, mounds and sacred landscapes of the ancient North American midcontinent , 1999 .

[136]  Robert L. Kelly,et al.  Coming into the Country: Early Paleoindian Hunting and Mobility , 1988, American Antiquity.

[137]  R. Lewin,et al.  Complexity: Life at the Edge of Chaos , 1992 .

[138]  H. Maschner The emergence of cultural complexity on the northern Northwest Coast , 1991, Antiquity.

[139]  S. Shennan,et al.  Ceramic Style Change and Neutral Evolution: A Case Study from Neolithic Europe , 2001, American Antiquity.

[140]  F. Neiman Stylistic Variation in Evolutionary Perspective: Inferences from Decorative Diversity and Interassemblage Distance in Illinois Woodland Ceramic Assemblages , 1995, American Antiquity.

[141]  Ian Hodder,et al.  Symbolic and structural archaeology , 1982 .

[142]  B. Turner On the concept of axial space , 2001 .

[143]  N. Castree,et al.  Social Nature: Theory, Practice, and Politics , 2001 .

[144]  J. Buikstra,et al.  Archaic Mortuary Sites In the Central Mississippi Drainage: Distribution, Structure, and Behavioral Implications , 1983 .

[145]  T. Naranjo Thoughts on Migration by Santa Clara Pueblo , 1995 .

[146]  T. Emerson,et al.  The Ideology of Authority and the Power of the Pot , 1991 .

[147]  Craig S. Smith,et al.  Facilities and Hunter-Gatherer Long-Term Land Use Patterns: An Example from Southwest Wyoming , 1999, American Antiquity.

[148]  Miriam T. Stark The archaeology of social boundaries , 1998 .

[149]  K. Kintigh Settlement, Subsistence, and Society in Late Zuni Prehistory , 1987 .

[150]  J. Steward,et al.  Theory of Culture Change: The Methodology of Multilinear Evolution , 1990 .

[151]  S. Plog,et al.  Dual Vision: A review of Women and Men in the Prehispanic Southwest, by Patricia L. Crown. Oxford: James Currey Publishers, 2001; ISBN 0-85255-923-2 hardback £40 & US$60; ISBN 0-85255-922-4 paperback £16.95 & US$24.95; xi + 503 pp., ills. , 2002, Cambridge Archaeological Journal.

[152]  Scott R. Hutson Gendered Citation Practices in American Antiquity and Other Archaeology Journals , 2002, American Antiquity.

[153]  M. Zedeño Landscapes, land use, and the history of territory formation: An example from the Puebloan southwest , 1997 .

[154]  Todd L. Howell,et al.  Post-Chacoan Social Integration at the Hinkson Site, New Mexico , 1996 .

[155]  Stephen Shennan,et al.  Introduction: Archaeological approaches to cultural identity , 2003 .

[156]  Kenneth M. Ames,et al.  Chiefly Power and Household Production on the Northwest Coast , 1995 .

[157]  C. M. Scarry,et al.  Status-Related Variation in Foodways in the Moundville Chiefdom , 1995, American Antiquity.

[158]  J. Robb THE ARCHAEOLOGY OF SYMBOLS , 1998 .

[159]  Michael B. Schiffer,et al.  Taking Charge: The Electric Automobile in America , 1996 .

[160]  D. Snow Migration in Prehistory: The Northern Iroquoian Case , 1995, American Antiquity.

[161]  James M. Skibo,et al.  The Explanation of Artifact Variability , 1997, American Antiquity.

[162]  B. Barker Contemporary archaeology in theory: a reader , 1997 .

[163]  Daniel Odess The Archaeology of Interaction: Views from Artifact Style and Material Exchange in Dorset Society , 1998, American Antiquity.

[164]  G. Feinman,et al.  2 – Too Many Types: An Overview of Sedentary Prestate Societies in the Americas , 1984 .

[165]  L. Cosmides,et al.  The Adapted mind : evolutionary psychology and the generation of culture , 1992 .

[166]  James M. Potter Pots, Parties, and Politics: Communal Feasting in the American Southwest , 2000, American Antiquity.

[167]  M. Aldenderfer Ritual, Hierarchy, and Change in Foraging Societies , 1993 .

[168]  James M. Skibo,et al.  Pottery and people : a dynamic interaction , 1999 .

[169]  R. Joyce,et al.  Women in prehistory : North America and Mesoamerica , 1997 .

[170]  Banks L. Leonard,et al.  Cannibalism, Warfare, and Drought in the Mesa Verde Region during the Twelfth Century A.D. , 2000, American Antiquity.

[171]  Barbara J. Mills,et al.  Accumulations research: Problems and prospects for estimating site occupation span , 1997 .

[172]  Roger C. Echo-Hawk Ancient History in the New World: Integrating Oral Traditions and the Archaeological Record in Deep Time , 2000, American Antiquity.

[173]  A. Rautman Hierarchy and Heterarchy in the American Southwest: A Comment on Mcguire and Saitta , 1998, American Antiquity.

[174]  M. Sahlins Evolution and culture , 1960 .

[175]  M. Schiffer Behavioral archaeology : first principles , 1996 .

[176]  G. Feinman,et al.  Social Differentiation and Leadership Development in Early Pithouse Villages in the Mogollon Region of the American Southwest , 1982, American Antiquity.

[177]  R. Lewis,et al.  Mississippian Towns and Sacred Spaces: Searching for an Architectural Grammar , 2002 .

[178]  E. Brumfiel The Quality of Tribute Cloth: The Place of Evidence in Archaeological Argument , 1996, American Antiquity.

[179]  J. Robb Material symbols : culture and economy in prehistory , 1999 .

[180]  C. Redman Distinguished Lecture in Archeology: In Defense of the Seventies—The Adolescence of New Archeology , 1991 .

[181]  A. Giddens The Constitution of Society , 1985 .

[182]  A. B. Knapp Archaeology without gravity: Postmodernism and the past , 1996 .

[183]  M. J. O’Brien,et al.  Applying Evolutionary Archaeology: A Systematic Approach , 2000 .

[184]  P. Minnis,et al.  Biodiversity and Native America , 2000 .

[185]  Todd L. VanPool,et al.  The Scientific Nature of Postprocessualism , 1999, American Antiquity.

[186]  J. Brown,et al.  The Archaeology of Ancient Religion in the Eastern Woodlands , 1997 .

[187]  Peter N. Peregrine,et al.  A Dual-Processual Theory for the Evolution of Mesoamerican Civilization , 1996, Current Anthropology.

[188]  Michael B. Schiffer,et al.  Archaeology as Behavioral Science1 , 1975 .

[189]  David G. Anderson,et al.  Paleoindian Colonization of the Americas: Implications from an Examination of Physiography, Demography, and Artifact Distribution , 2000, American Antiquity.

[190]  H. Neff We Have Met the Selectionist and It Is Us: Some Comments on Loney's “Critical Review of Models of Technological Change in Ceramic Studies” , 2001, American Antiquity.

[191]  D. Croes Prehistoric ethnicity on the Northwest Coast of North America: An evaluation of style in basketry and lithics , 1989 .

[192]  Marvin Harris,et al.  Primitive social organization : an evolutionary perspective , 1962 .

[193]  R. Preucel The postprocessual condition , 1995 .

[194]  Philip J. Arnold III,et al.  On the Vanpools' “Scientific” Postprocessualism , 2001, American Antiquity.

[195]  E. Smith,et al.  Analyzing adaptive strategies: Human behavioral ecology at twenty‐five , 2000 .

[196]  B. Hockett Sociopolitical Meaning of Faunal Remains from Baker Village , 1998, American Antiquity.

[197]  Mark D. Elson,et al.  Causes and Consequences of Migration in the 13th Century Tonto Basin , 1995 .

[198]  James M. Skibo,et al.  Behavioral Archaeology and the Study of Technology , 2001, American Antiquity.

[199]  Keith F. Otterbein A History of Research on Warfare in Anthropology , 1999 .

[200]  Nancy J. Parezo Hidden scholars : women anthropologists and the Native American Southwest , 1996 .

[201]  T. Jones Mortars, Pestles, and Division of Labor in Prehistoric California: A View from Big Sur , 1996, American Antiquity.

[202]  Lynne Sebastian The Chaco Anasazi: Sociopolitical Evolution in the Prehistoric Southwest , 1994 .

[203]  M. Schiffer Behavioral Archaeology: Some Clarifications , 1999, American Antiquity.

[204]  R. Wright Gender and Archaeology , 1996 .

[205]  Jean-François Lyotard,et al.  The Postmodern Condition , 1979 .

[206]  C. G. Turner,et al.  Man Corn: Cannibalism and Violence in the Prehistoric American Southwest , 1998 .

[207]  H. Karlsson,et al.  Philosophy and Archaeological Practice. Perspectives for the 21st Century , 2001 .

[208]  K. Barlow Predicting Maize Agriculture among the Fremont: An Economic Comparison of Farming and Foraging in the American Southwest , 2002, American Antiquity.

[209]  R. Parmentier Wisdom Sits in Places: Landscape and Language among the Western Apache. , 1997 .

[210]  J. Arnold Labor and the rise of complex hunter-gatherers , 1993 .

[211]  D. Bamforth Evidence and Metaphor in Evolutionary Archaeology , 2002, American Antiquity.

[212]  Fred Plog,et al.  The study of prehistoric change , 1974 .

[213]  B. Trigger Archaeology and Epistemology: Dialoguing across the Darwinian Chasm , 1998, American Journal of Archaeology.

[214]  K. Zimmerer,et al.  Human Geography and the “New Ecology”: The Prospect and Promise of Integration , 1994 .

[215]  Neff On Evolutionary Ecology and Evolutionary Archaeology: Some Common Ground? , 2000 .

[216]  Jon Muller Mississippian Political Economy , 1997 .

[217]  S. Upham,et al.  The Origin and Development of the Pueblo Katsina Cult , 1991 .

[218]  Colin Renfrew,et al.  The Ancient Mind: Elements of Cognitive Archaeology , 1997 .

[219]  Michelle Hegmon,et al.  The Social Dynamics of Pottery Style in the Early Puebloan Southwest , 1995 .

[220]  W. H. Walker Stratigraphy and Practical Reason , 2002 .

[221]  R. McGuire,et al.  Although They Have Petty Captains, They Obey Them Badly: The Dialectics of Prehispanic Western Pueblo Social Organization , 1996, American Antiquity.

[222]  Julian Thomas,et al.  Interpretive archaeology: a reader , 2000 .

[223]  Lewis R. Binford,et al.  Archaeology as Anthropology , 1962, American Antiquity.

[224]  S. Ortman Conceptual Metaphor in the Archaeological Record: Methods and an Example from the American Southwest , 2000, American Antiquity.

[225]  E. Chilton Material Meanings: Critical Approaches to the Interpretation of Material Culture , 1999 .

[226]  Alison Wylie,et al.  Questions of Evidence, Legitimacy, and the (Dis)Unity of Science , 2000, American Antiquity.

[227]  R. Bentley,et al.  Stylistic Change as a Self-Organized Critical Phenomenon: An Archaeological Study in Complexity , 2001 .

[228]  Teresa D. Hurt,et al.  Style and Function , 2000 .

[229]  C. Renfrew,et al.  Cognition and Material Culture: The Archaeology of Symbolic Storage , 2002 .

[230]  D. Macdonald Grief and Burial in the American Southwest: The Role of Evolutionary Theory in the Interpretation of Mortuary Remains , 2001, American Antiquity.

[231]  S. Kuehn New Evidence for Late Paleoindian-Early Archaic Subsistence Behavior in the Western Great Lakes , 1998, American Antiquity.

[232]  A. Duff Western Pueblo Identities: Regional Interaction, Migration, and Transformation , 2002 .

[233]  Todd L. Howell,et al.  Archaeological Identification of Kin Groups Using Mortuary and Biological Data: An Example from the American Southwest , 1996, American Antiquity.

[234]  Michael J. Shott Mortal Pots: On Use Life and Vessel Size in the Formation of Ceramic Assemblages , 1996, American Antiquity.

[235]  Robert L. Bettinger,et al.  Was Agriculture Impossible during the Pleistocene but Mandatory during the Holocene? A Climate Change Hypothesis , 2001, American Antiquity.

[236]  D. Lieberman,et al.  Symbolism and Modern Human Origins [and Comments and Reply] , 1990, Current Anthropology.

[237]  Dean J. Saitta,et al.  Power, Labor, and the Dynamics of Change in Chacoan Political Economy , 1997, American Antiquity.

[238]  Pierre Bourdieu,et al.  Outline of a Theory of Practice , 2020, On Violence.

[239]  K. Dongoske,et al.  Archaeological Cultures and Cultural Affiliation: Hopi and Zuni Perspectives in the American Southwest , 1997, American Antiquity.

[240]  G. Schachner Ritual Control and Transformation in Middle-Range Societies: An Example from the American Southwest , 2001 .

[241]  Margaret Morrison,et al.  Models as Mediators: Perspectives on Natural and Social Science , 1999 .

[242]  Behavioral Archaeology: Four Strategies1 , 1975 .

[243]  Douglas Kellner,et al.  The Postmodern Turn , 1997 .

[244]  M. Nassaney,et al.  Interpretations of Native North American Life: Material Contributions to Ethnohistory , 2002 .

[245]  G. Feinman,et al.  Political Hierarchies and Organizational Strategies in the Puebloan Southwest , 2000, American Antiquity.

[246]  W. Lovis,et al.  Wetlands and Emergent Horticultural Economies in the Upper Great Lakes: A New Perspective from the Schultz Site , 2001, American Antiquity.

[247]  R. Leonard,et al.  Elements of an inclusive evolutionary model for archaeology , 1987 .

[248]  J. Hendon Gender and Archaeology , 1997 .

[249]  Mary Beth D. Trubitt Mound Building and Prestige Goods Exchange: Changing Strategies in the Cahokia Chiefdom , 2000, American Antiquity.

[250]  Mintcy D. Maxham Rural Communities in the Black Warrior Valley, Alabama: The Role of Commoners in the Creation of the Moundville I Landscape , 2000, American Antiquity.

[251]  David E. Doyel Anasazi regional organization and the Chaco system , 1992 .

[252]  Stephen H. Lekson The Chaco Meridian: Centers of Political Power in the Ancient Southwest , 2000 .

[253]  B. J. Clay Other Times, Other Places: Agency and the Big Man in Central New Ireland , 1992 .

[254]  Helen L. Loney Society and Technological Control: A Critical Review of Models of Technological Change in Ceramic Studies , 2000, American Antiquity.

[255]  Ben Fitzhugh,et al.  Risk and Invention in Human Technological Evolution , 2001 .

[256]  I. Randolph Daniel,et al.  Stone Raw Material Availability and Early Archaic Settlement in the Southeastern United States , 2001, American Antiquity.

[257]  Helen L Loney,et al.  Society and Technological Control: An Argument Against Progress in the Study of Ancient Ceramic Technology. , 2000 .

[258]  D. Harvey,et al.  The Condition of Postmodernity , 2020, The New Social Theory Reader.

[259]  Jean Baudrillard,et al.  Symbolic Exchange And Death , 1993 .

[260]  Richard Peet,et al.  Modern Geographical Thought , 1998 .

[261]  P. Crown,et al.  The Origins of Southwestern Ceramic Containers: Women's Time Allocation and Economic Intensification , 1995, Journal of Anthropological Research.

[262]  Stuart J. Fiedel,et al.  Older Than We Thought: Implications of Corrected Dates for Paleoindians , 1999, American Antiquity.

[263]  J. Michaelsen,et al.  Risk, Climatic Variability, and the Study of Southwestern Prehistory: An Evolutionary Perspective , 1996, American Antiquity.

[264]  Ruth Benedict,et al.  Patterns of Culture , 2019, Nature.