About This Book
This work examines domestic architecture among indigenous American peoples, arguing that dwelling forms reveal social organization, kinship patterns, and stages of cultural development. It emphasizes communal and joint-tenement houses—often organized around maternal kin or gens—contrasting simpler longhouse arrangements with more complex adobe and stone tenements that accompany agricultural advancement. The text outlines kinship units (gens, phratry, tribe), proposes a periodization marked by technologies such as pottery and adobe, surveys regional house types from mound-builders to southern adobe communities, and offers methodological suggestions for archaeological study of ruins and household life.
About the Author
More Books by This Author
1 picks
You May Also Like
6 picks
"Five-Head" Creek; and Fish Drugging in the Pacific / 1901
by Louis Becke
"Pennsylvania Dutch," and other essays
by Phebe Earle Gibbons
"Sterminator Vesevo" (Vesuvius the great exterminator) / Diary of the Eruption of April 1906
by Matilde Serao
21 Jahre in Indien. Dritter Theil: Sumatra.
by Heinrich Breitenstein
21 Jahre in Indien. Erster Theil: Borneo.
by Heinrich Breitenstein
A Bakony (1. kötet)
by Károly Eötvös
