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Inka Bird Idiom: Amazonian Feathers in the Andes: Pitt Latin American Series

Autor Claudia Brosseder
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 18 dec 2023
How Indigenous People Used Feathers as a Significant Way of Symbolic Communication in the Andes  

From majestic Amazonian macaws and highland Andean hawks to tiny colorful tanagers and tall flamingos, birds and their feathers played an important role in the Inka empire. Claudia Brosseder uncovers the many meanings that Inkas attached to the diverse fowl of the Amazon, the eastern Andean foothills, and the highlands. She shows how birds and feathers shaped Inka politics, launched wars, and initiated peace. Feathers provided protection against unpredictable enemies, made possible communication with deities, and brought an imagined Inka past into a political present. Richly textured contexts of feathered objects recovered from Late Horizon archaeological records and from sixteenth- and seventeenth-century accounts written by Spanish interlocutors enable new insights into Inka visions of interspecies relationships, an Inka ontology, and Inka views of the place of the human in their ecology. Inka Bird Idiom invites reconsideration of the deep intellectual ties that connected the Amazon and the mountain forests with the Andean highlands and the Pacific coast. 
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780822947592
ISBN-10: 0822947595
Pagini: 224
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 28 mm
Greutate: 1.02 kg
Editura: University of Pittsburgh Press
Colecția University of Pittsburgh Press
Seria Pitt Latin American Series


Recenzii

“In this amply illustrated and beautifully written book, Brosseder scours archaeological and ethnohistorical records to reveal the meanings of birds and their feathers to the Inkas. While fine Andean featherwork has long been admired as craft, Brosseder’s study sheds new light on why birds were so integral to the visual cultures of Andean peoples across both time and space.” —Carolyn Dean, distinguished professor, History of Art & Visual Culture, University of California at Santa Cruz 

“What are we to make of stuffed ducks that Atahualpa sent to Pizzaro before they met?  How is the Virgin Mary associated with parrots? Why are bundles of feathers offered to the sacred? Birds and their feathers in all their various roles in Andean, and especially Inca, society before and after the conquest are examined herein. Their materiality and meanings are the heart of Brosseder’s exquisite study. What unfolds here is the Andean perspective and use of this incredibly vibrant resource that is so rich and powerful and beyond the Western imagination.”  - Thomas Cummins, Director of Dumbarton Oaks 
 

Notă biografică

Claudia Brosseder is associate professor at the University of Illinois Urbana–Champaign.