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Community Landscapes, Identity, and Practice: Ancestral Pueblos of the Lion Mountain Area, Central New Mexico, USA
American Antiquity ( IF 3.129 ) Pub Date : 2021-10-28 , DOI: 10.1017/aaq.2021.70
Suzanne L. Eckert 1 , Deborah L. Huntley 2
Affiliation  

Landscape archaeology has been widely used as a framework for understanding the myriad ways in which people lived in their natural and built environments. In this study, we use systematic survey data in conjunction with ceramic chronology building to explore how residents of the Lion Mountain area in Central New Mexico created and sustained community landscapes over time as memories and stories became linked with specific places. We combine practice theory with the concept of social memory to show that these residents used their community landscape to both maintain and transform community identity over multiple generations. To strengthen our argument, we use a dual temporal approach, considering our data both by “looking back” and “looking forward” in time relative to the residents living on the landscape. Ultimately, we argue that residents of the Lion Mountain Community lived and died within a community landscape of their making. This community landscape, which was maintained and transformed through collective memory, included significant landmarks and entailed participation in specific networks, helping to reinforce community identity over time.



中文翻译:

社区景观、身份和实践:美国新墨西哥州中部狮子山地区的祖先普韦布洛

景观考古学已被广泛用作了解人们在自然环境和建筑环境中的各种生活方式的框架。在这项研究中,我们使用系统调查数据结合陶瓷年代学建筑来探索新墨西哥州中部狮子山地区的居民如何随着时间的推移创造和维持社区景观,因为记忆和故事与特定地点相关联。我们将实践理论与社会记忆的概念相结合,表明这些居民利用他们的社区景观来维持和改变多代的社区身份。为了加强我们的论点,我们使用双重时间方法,通过相对于生活在景观上的居民的时间“回顾”和“展望”来考虑我们的数据。最终,我们认为狮子山社区的居民在他们创造的社区景观中生活和死亡。这种通过集体记忆得以维持和转变的社区景观包括重要的地标,并需要参与特定的网络,随着时间的推移有助于加强社区身份。

更新日期:2021-12-30
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