Lexington Books
Pages: 318
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-0-7391-9488-1 • Hardback • December 2015 • $133.00 • (£102.00)
978-1-4985-1773-7 • Paperback • September 2017 • $60.99 • (£47.00)
978-0-7391-9489-8 • eBook • December 2015 • $57.50 • (£44.00)
Jessica Joyce Christie is associate professor at the School of Art and Design at East Carolina University.
Dedication
List of Figures
Introduction:Background, Purpose, Methodologies, and Findings, Source Materials
Chapter 1:Formal and Structural Analysis of Inka Carved Rocks
Carving Techniques
Pre-Inka Roots of Stone Carving and Rock Art
The Formal Elements of Inka Carved Rocks:
Structural Features Associated with Carved Rocks
Chapter 2:Carved Rocks on the Cusco Zeq’e Lines
Groundwork
Inka Landscape and Carved Rocks – Appearance, Experience, and Perception Inka Landscape and Carved Rocks – Essence, Imagination, and Stone Ideology
Summary
Chapter 3:The Birthplace of the Sun, Moon and the Inka Ancestors on the Island of the Sun and the Southern Basin of Lake Titicaca
Groundwork
Inka Landscape and Carved Rocks – Appearance, Experience, and Perception Inka Landscape and Carved Rocks –Essence, Imagination, and Stone Ideology
Chapter 4:Inka Pacariqtambo – A Landscape of Power Relations through Time
Groundwork
Inka Landscape and Carved Rocks –Appearance, Essence, and Perception
Inka Landscape and Carved Rocks –Essence, Imagination, and Stone Ideology
Chapter 5:Machu Picchu
Royal Estates
Machu Picchu
Groundwork
Inka Landscape and Carved Rocks – Appearance, Experience, and Perception
Inka Landscape and Carved Rocks – Essence, Imagination, and Stone Ideology
Conclusions
Chapter 6:Chinchero
Groundwork
Inka Landscape and Carved Rocks –Appearance, Experience, and Perception
Inka Landscape and Carved Rocks –Essence, Imagination, and Stone Ideology
Conclusions
Chapter 7:Discussion and Conclusions
Major Results of this Investigation
Relations with Stony Places Constructed in the Contemporary
National and Global Worlds
Conclusions
Afterword
References
The precision-fitted masonry of Inca architecture has been celebrated for its beauty and advanced degree of engineering. However, the significance of carved outcrops in Inca religious ideology has received far less attention. Christie provides a welcome synthesis of information on modified stone while offering novel interpretations of the role of built environments in Inca imperial strategies. Her theoretical framework combines phenomenological approaches popular in British archaeology with practice and political landscapes perspectives. The latter recognizes that the interrelationships between peoples, places, and things set the parameters for political engagement and structured past power asymmetries. Christie contends that carving stone outcrops initially fostered private dialogues and reciprocal dependencies between animated landforms and imperial agents. However, the carved rock soon came to mark Inca sovereignty, territorial boundaries, and the direct intervention of the state. Christie’s detailed examination of modified outcrops in the Cusco region and elsewhere reveals their multiple meanings and agencies, and she traces continuity and change in stone cults from the Inca period to the present. She even argues that certain groups of boulders were gridded like khipus and functioned as counting devices (yupanas). Should appeal to scholars interested in political landscape and the semiotic affordance of stone in the Andean context and beyond. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above.
— Choice Reviews