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Course Details |
Fees and Dates
Later Year Course
| Offered By: |
School of Archaeology & Anthropology |
| Academic Career: |
Undergraduate |
| Course Subject: |
Archaeology |
| Offered in: |
ARCH2034 will not be offered in 2010 |
| Unit Value: |
6 units |
| Course Description: |
This course explores the interface between the archaeological record and the ethnohistoric document. It will outline the legendary and official histories and administrative accounts of the ancient, large scale political empires, and the archaeology of the urban centre, its rural sustaining area and its distant provinces in order to discuss the difficulty of using these divergent sources to construct an understanding of these extensive and complex socio-political and economic entities. The course will consider various models of complex society reconstruction, such as core and periphery, dominance and subordination, kingship and social organisation, and ethnicity, as well as questions of the meanings of material culture, settlement hierarchies, agricultural systems and the sacred landscape. Various ancient imperial settings will be considered comparatively, where appropriate. |
| Indicative Assessment: |
Short essay (25%), document analysis exercise (25%) and long essay (50%).
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| Workload: |
Normally offered in alternate years
2 hours of lectures and one hour tutorial per week. |
| Areas of Interest: |
Archaeology |
| Requisite Statement: |
One first year course to the value of 6 units in Archaeology (ARCH or PREH) or permission of the lecturer. |
| Incompatibility: |
PREH2034 Archaeology and the Document |
| Preliminary Reading: |
Townsend, R. The Aztecs, Thames and Hudson, 1992.
Kendall, A. Everyday Life of the Incas, Batsford, 1973.
Juan de Betanzos. Narrative of the Incas, University of Texas Press, 1996.
Hyslop, J. Inka Settlement Planning, University of Texas Press, 1990.
Berdan, F. Codex Mendoza, University of California Press, 1996.
Hodge, M. & Smith, M. (eds). Economies and Polities in the Aztec Realm, 1994.
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| Majors/Specialisations: |
Archaeology |
| Academic Contact: |
Mr Ian Farrington |
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