Sacred Games, Death, and Renewal in the Ancient Eastern Woodlands

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Product details

  • ISBN 9780759120327
  • Weight: 977g
  • Dimensions: 167 x 238mm
  • Publication Date: 16 Jan 2011
  • Publisher: AltaMira Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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The book presents an account of the Ohio Middle Woodland period embankment earthworks, ca 100 B.C. to A.D. 400, that is radically different from the prevailing theory. Byers critically addresses all the arguments and characterizations that make up the current treatment of the embankment earthworks and then presents an alternative interpretation.

This unconventional view hinges on two basic social characterizations: the complementary heterarchical community model and the cult sodality heterarchy model. Byers posits that these two models interact to characterize the Ohio Middle Woodland period settlement pattern; the community was constituted by autonomous social formations: clans based on kinship and sodalities based on companionship. The individual communities of the region each have their clan components dispersed within a fairly well-defined zone while the sodality components of the same set of region-wide communities ally with each other and build and operate the embankment earthworks. This dichotomy is possible only because the clans and sodalities respect each other as relatively autonomous; the affairs of the clans, focusing on domestic and family matters, remain outside the concerns of the sodalities and the affairs of the sodalities, focusing on world renewal and sacred games, remain outside the concerns of the clans. Therefore, two models are required to understand the embankment earthworks and no individual earthwork can be identified with any particular community.

This radical interpretation grounded in empirical archaeological data, as well as the in-depth overview of the current theory of the Ohio Middle Woodland period, make this book a critically important addition to the perspective of scholars of North American archaeology and scholars grappling with prehistoric social systems.

A. Martin Byers taught anthropology and humanities at Vanier College in Montreal for thirty years and was recently research associate in the Department of Anthropology at McGill University. He is author of Cahokia: A World Renewal Cult Heterarchy (University Press of Florida 2006) and The Ohio Hopewell Episode: Paradigm Lost and Paradigm Gained (University of Akron Press 2004).

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