The Oxford Handbook of the Incas
Herausgeber: Alconini, Sonia; Covey, R Alan
The Oxford Handbook of the Incas
Herausgeber: Alconini, Sonia; Covey, R Alan
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The Oxford Handbook of the Incas aims to be the first comprehensive book on the Inca, the largest empire in the pre-Columbian world. Using archaeology, ethnohistory and art history, the central goal of this handbook is to bring together recent research conducted by experts from different fields that study the Inca empire, from its origins and expansion to its demise and continuing influence in contemporary times.
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The Oxford Handbook of the Incas aims to be the first comprehensive book on the Inca, the largest empire in the pre-Columbian world. Using archaeology, ethnohistory and art history, the central goal of this handbook is to bring together recent research conducted by experts from different fields that study the Inca empire, from its origins and expansion to its demise and continuing influence in contemporary times.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 880
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Mai 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 256mm x 179mm x 40mm
- Gewicht: 1422g
- ISBN-13: 9780190219352
- ISBN-10: 0190219351
- Artikelnr.: 49206655
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 880
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Mai 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 256mm x 179mm x 40mm
- Gewicht: 1422g
- ISBN-13: 9780190219352
- ISBN-10: 0190219351
- Artikelnr.: 49206655
Sonia Alconini is David A. Harrison III Professor of Archaeology at University of Virginia. R. Alan Covey is Professor of Anthropology at University of Texas at Austin.
* List of Contributors
* Introduction
* PART 1. THE ORIGINS AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE INCA EMPIRE
* 1.1: Joanne Pillsbury: Writing Inca History: The Colonial Era
* 1.2: Jerry D. Moore: Andean Statecraft before the Incas
* 1.3: R. Alan Covey: The Spread of Inca Power in the Cuzco Region
* 1.4: Ian Farrington: Cuzco: Development of the Imperial Capital
* 1.5: R. Alan Covey and Sonia Alconini: Conclusions: Retracing the
Intellectual Journey of Inca Origins
* PART 2. ROYAL ESTATES AND INCA IMPERIAL CENTERS
* 2.1: Kylie E. Quave: Royal Estates and Imperial Centers in the Cuzco
Region
* 2.2: János Gyarmati and Carola Condarco: Inca Imperial Strategies and
Installations in Central Bolivia
* 2.3: Lawrence Coben: The Inca Center of Incallacta in the
Southeastern Andes
* 2.4: Tamara L. Bray and José Echeverría: The Inca Centers of
Tomebamba and Caranqui in Northern Chinchaysuyu
* 2.5: Peter Eeckhout and Enrique López-Hurtado: Pachacamac and the
Incas on the Coast of Peru
* 2.6: Sonia Alconini and R. Alan Covey: Conclusions: The Political
Economy of Royal Estates and Imperial Centers in the Heartland and
More Distant Provinces
* PART 3. INCA HARD POWER: MILITARISM, ECONOMY, AND POLITICAL
HIERARCHIES
* 3.1: Terence N. D'Altroy: Inca Political Organization, Economic
Institutions, and Infrastructure
* 3.2: Steve Kosiba: Cultivating Empire: Inca Intensive Agricultural
Strategies
* 3.3: Amanda S. Aland: Fishing Economies and Ethnic Specialization
under Inca Rule
* 3.4: Bethany L. Turner and Barbara R. Hewitt: The Acllacona and
Mitmacona: Diet, Ethnicity, and Status
* 3.5: Cathy Lynne Costin: Gender and Status in Inca Textile and
Ceramic Craft Production
* 3.6: Justin Jennings and Guy Duke: Making the Typical Exceptional:
The Elevation of Inca Cuisine
* 3.7: R. Alan Covey and Sonia Alconini: Conclusions: Reassessing Inca
Hard Power
* PART 4. INCA IMPERIAL IDENTITIES: COLONIZATION, RESISTANCE, AND
HYBRIDITY
* 4.1: Félix A. Acuto and Iván Leibowicz: Inca Colonial Encounters and
Incorporation in Northern Argentina
* 4.2: Calogero M. Santoro and Mauricio Uribe: Inca Imperial
Colonization in Northern Chile
* 4.3: Colleen Zori: Inca Mining and Metal Production
* 4.4: Dennis E. Ogburn: Chinchaysuyu and the Northern Inca Territory
* 4.5: Sonia Alconini: Inca Advances into the Southeastern Tropics: The
Inca Frontier in Perspective
* 4.6: Inge Schjellerup: Inca Transformations of the Chachapoya Region
* 4.7: Andrés Troncoso: Inca Landscapes of Domination: Rock Art and
Community in North-Central Chile
* 4.8: Sonia Alconini and R. Alan Covey: Conclusions: Inca Imperial
Identities -- Colonization, Resistance, and Hybridity
* PART 5. SACRED LANDSCAPES
* 5.1: Brian S. Bauer: The Ritual Landscape of the Inca: The Huacas and
Ceques of Cuzco
* 5.2: Jessica Joyce Christie: Rock Shrines, Ceque Lines, and
Pilgrimage in the Inca Provinces
* 5.3: Zachary J. Chase: The Inca State and Local Ritual Landscapes
* 5.4: Jason Yaeger and José María López Bejarano: Inca Sacred
Landscapes in the Titicaca Basin
* 5.5: Pablo Mignone: Peregrination and Rituality in the Southern
Provinces
* 5.6: Sonia Alconini and R. Alan Covey: Conclusions: Sacred
Geographies and Imperial Expansion
* PART 6. ART, ICONOGRAPHY, AND RECORD-KEEPING
* 6.1: Adam Herring: Inca Aesthetics and Scholarly Inquiry
* 6.2: Gary Urton: Quipus and Yupanas as Imperial Registers: Reckoning
and Recording in Tahuantinsuyu
* 6.3: Jean-Pierre Protzen: The Development and Variation of Inca
Architecture
* 6.4: Elena Phipps: Garments, Tocapu, Status, and Identity: Inca and
Colonial Perspectives
* 6.5: Mariusz Ziólkowski: The Iconography and Use of Inca and Colonial
Drinking Vessels
* 6.6: R. Alan Covey and Sonia Alconini: Conclusions: Civilizing the
Incas
* PART 7. THE COLONIAL ERA: CONTINUITY, CHANGE, AND ADAPTATION
* 7.1: Steven A. Wernke: Transformations: Evangelization, Resettlement,
and Community Organization in the Early Viceroyalty of Peru
* 7.2: Melissa S. Murphy: Colonial Demography and Bioarchaeology
* 7.3: Vincent R. Lee: Vilcabamba: Last Stronghold of the Inca
* 7.4: David T. Garrett: Inca Ancestry and Colonial Privilege
* 7.5: R. Alan Covey and Sonia Alconini: Conclusions: Colonial Incas
and the Myths of Conquest
* PART 8. THE MANY USES OF THE INCA PAST IN THE PRESENT
* 8.1: Stefanie Gänger: Inca "Antiquities" in the Nineteenth and Early
Twentieth Centuries
* 8.2: Lucy C. Salazar and Richard L. Burger: Reinventing the Incas in
Contemporary Cuzco: The Cases of Inti Raymi and Machu Picchu
* 8.3: Catherine Elisabeth Covey: Performances of "Pasts": Spaces of
Indigeneity and Heritage Tourism in Cuzco
* 8.4: Sonia Alconini and R. Alan Covey: Conclusions: Appropriating the
Inca -- The Complexities of Social Memory
* Index
* Introduction
* PART 1. THE ORIGINS AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE INCA EMPIRE
* 1.1: Joanne Pillsbury: Writing Inca History: The Colonial Era
* 1.2: Jerry D. Moore: Andean Statecraft before the Incas
* 1.3: R. Alan Covey: The Spread of Inca Power in the Cuzco Region
* 1.4: Ian Farrington: Cuzco: Development of the Imperial Capital
* 1.5: R. Alan Covey and Sonia Alconini: Conclusions: Retracing the
Intellectual Journey of Inca Origins
* PART 2. ROYAL ESTATES AND INCA IMPERIAL CENTERS
* 2.1: Kylie E. Quave: Royal Estates and Imperial Centers in the Cuzco
Region
* 2.2: János Gyarmati and Carola Condarco: Inca Imperial Strategies and
Installations in Central Bolivia
* 2.3: Lawrence Coben: The Inca Center of Incallacta in the
Southeastern Andes
* 2.4: Tamara L. Bray and José Echeverría: The Inca Centers of
Tomebamba and Caranqui in Northern Chinchaysuyu
* 2.5: Peter Eeckhout and Enrique López-Hurtado: Pachacamac and the
Incas on the Coast of Peru
* 2.6: Sonia Alconini and R. Alan Covey: Conclusions: The Political
Economy of Royal Estates and Imperial Centers in the Heartland and
More Distant Provinces
* PART 3. INCA HARD POWER: MILITARISM, ECONOMY, AND POLITICAL
HIERARCHIES
* 3.1: Terence N. D'Altroy: Inca Political Organization, Economic
Institutions, and Infrastructure
* 3.2: Steve Kosiba: Cultivating Empire: Inca Intensive Agricultural
Strategies
* 3.3: Amanda S. Aland: Fishing Economies and Ethnic Specialization
under Inca Rule
* 3.4: Bethany L. Turner and Barbara R. Hewitt: The Acllacona and
Mitmacona: Diet, Ethnicity, and Status
* 3.5: Cathy Lynne Costin: Gender and Status in Inca Textile and
Ceramic Craft Production
* 3.6: Justin Jennings and Guy Duke: Making the Typical Exceptional:
The Elevation of Inca Cuisine
* 3.7: R. Alan Covey and Sonia Alconini: Conclusions: Reassessing Inca
Hard Power
* PART 4. INCA IMPERIAL IDENTITIES: COLONIZATION, RESISTANCE, AND
HYBRIDITY
* 4.1: Félix A. Acuto and Iván Leibowicz: Inca Colonial Encounters and
Incorporation in Northern Argentina
* 4.2: Calogero M. Santoro and Mauricio Uribe: Inca Imperial
Colonization in Northern Chile
* 4.3: Colleen Zori: Inca Mining and Metal Production
* 4.4: Dennis E. Ogburn: Chinchaysuyu and the Northern Inca Territory
* 4.5: Sonia Alconini: Inca Advances into the Southeastern Tropics: The
Inca Frontier in Perspective
* 4.6: Inge Schjellerup: Inca Transformations of the Chachapoya Region
* 4.7: Andrés Troncoso: Inca Landscapes of Domination: Rock Art and
Community in North-Central Chile
* 4.8: Sonia Alconini and R. Alan Covey: Conclusions: Inca Imperial
Identities -- Colonization, Resistance, and Hybridity
* PART 5. SACRED LANDSCAPES
* 5.1: Brian S. Bauer: The Ritual Landscape of the Inca: The Huacas and
Ceques of Cuzco
* 5.2: Jessica Joyce Christie: Rock Shrines, Ceque Lines, and
Pilgrimage in the Inca Provinces
* 5.3: Zachary J. Chase: The Inca State and Local Ritual Landscapes
* 5.4: Jason Yaeger and José María López Bejarano: Inca Sacred
Landscapes in the Titicaca Basin
* 5.5: Pablo Mignone: Peregrination and Rituality in the Southern
Provinces
* 5.6: Sonia Alconini and R. Alan Covey: Conclusions: Sacred
Geographies and Imperial Expansion
* PART 6. ART, ICONOGRAPHY, AND RECORD-KEEPING
* 6.1: Adam Herring: Inca Aesthetics and Scholarly Inquiry
* 6.2: Gary Urton: Quipus and Yupanas as Imperial Registers: Reckoning
and Recording in Tahuantinsuyu
* 6.3: Jean-Pierre Protzen: The Development and Variation of Inca
Architecture
* 6.4: Elena Phipps: Garments, Tocapu, Status, and Identity: Inca and
Colonial Perspectives
* 6.5: Mariusz Ziólkowski: The Iconography and Use of Inca and Colonial
Drinking Vessels
* 6.6: R. Alan Covey and Sonia Alconini: Conclusions: Civilizing the
Incas
* PART 7. THE COLONIAL ERA: CONTINUITY, CHANGE, AND ADAPTATION
* 7.1: Steven A. Wernke: Transformations: Evangelization, Resettlement,
and Community Organization in the Early Viceroyalty of Peru
* 7.2: Melissa S. Murphy: Colonial Demography and Bioarchaeology
* 7.3: Vincent R. Lee: Vilcabamba: Last Stronghold of the Inca
* 7.4: David T. Garrett: Inca Ancestry and Colonial Privilege
* 7.5: R. Alan Covey and Sonia Alconini: Conclusions: Colonial Incas
and the Myths of Conquest
* PART 8. THE MANY USES OF THE INCA PAST IN THE PRESENT
* 8.1: Stefanie Gänger: Inca "Antiquities" in the Nineteenth and Early
Twentieth Centuries
* 8.2: Lucy C. Salazar and Richard L. Burger: Reinventing the Incas in
Contemporary Cuzco: The Cases of Inti Raymi and Machu Picchu
* 8.3: Catherine Elisabeth Covey: Performances of "Pasts": Spaces of
Indigeneity and Heritage Tourism in Cuzco
* 8.4: Sonia Alconini and R. Alan Covey: Conclusions: Appropriating the
Inca -- The Complexities of Social Memory
* Index
* List of Contributors
* Introduction
* PART 1. THE ORIGINS AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE INCA EMPIRE
* 1.1: Joanne Pillsbury: Writing Inca History: The Colonial Era
* 1.2: Jerry D. Moore: Andean Statecraft before the Incas
* 1.3: R. Alan Covey: The Spread of Inca Power in the Cuzco Region
* 1.4: Ian Farrington: Cuzco: Development of the Imperial Capital
* 1.5: R. Alan Covey and Sonia Alconini: Conclusions: Retracing the
Intellectual Journey of Inca Origins
* PART 2. ROYAL ESTATES AND INCA IMPERIAL CENTERS
* 2.1: Kylie E. Quave: Royal Estates and Imperial Centers in the Cuzco
Region
* 2.2: János Gyarmati and Carola Condarco: Inca Imperial Strategies and
Installations in Central Bolivia
* 2.3: Lawrence Coben: The Inca Center of Incallacta in the
Southeastern Andes
* 2.4: Tamara L. Bray and José Echeverría: The Inca Centers of
Tomebamba and Caranqui in Northern Chinchaysuyu
* 2.5: Peter Eeckhout and Enrique López-Hurtado: Pachacamac and the
Incas on the Coast of Peru
* 2.6: Sonia Alconini and R. Alan Covey: Conclusions: The Political
Economy of Royal Estates and Imperial Centers in the Heartland and
More Distant Provinces
* PART 3. INCA HARD POWER: MILITARISM, ECONOMY, AND POLITICAL
HIERARCHIES
* 3.1: Terence N. D'Altroy: Inca Political Organization, Economic
Institutions, and Infrastructure
* 3.2: Steve Kosiba: Cultivating Empire: Inca Intensive Agricultural
Strategies
* 3.3: Amanda S. Aland: Fishing Economies and Ethnic Specialization
under Inca Rule
* 3.4: Bethany L. Turner and Barbara R. Hewitt: The Acllacona and
Mitmacona: Diet, Ethnicity, and Status
* 3.5: Cathy Lynne Costin: Gender and Status in Inca Textile and
Ceramic Craft Production
* 3.6: Justin Jennings and Guy Duke: Making the Typical Exceptional:
The Elevation of Inca Cuisine
* 3.7: R. Alan Covey and Sonia Alconini: Conclusions: Reassessing Inca
Hard Power
* PART 4. INCA IMPERIAL IDENTITIES: COLONIZATION, RESISTANCE, AND
HYBRIDITY
* 4.1: Félix A. Acuto and Iván Leibowicz: Inca Colonial Encounters and
Incorporation in Northern Argentina
* 4.2: Calogero M. Santoro and Mauricio Uribe: Inca Imperial
Colonization in Northern Chile
* 4.3: Colleen Zori: Inca Mining and Metal Production
* 4.4: Dennis E. Ogburn: Chinchaysuyu and the Northern Inca Territory
* 4.5: Sonia Alconini: Inca Advances into the Southeastern Tropics: The
Inca Frontier in Perspective
* 4.6: Inge Schjellerup: Inca Transformations of the Chachapoya Region
* 4.7: Andrés Troncoso: Inca Landscapes of Domination: Rock Art and
Community in North-Central Chile
* 4.8: Sonia Alconini and R. Alan Covey: Conclusions: Inca Imperial
Identities -- Colonization, Resistance, and Hybridity
* PART 5. SACRED LANDSCAPES
* 5.1: Brian S. Bauer: The Ritual Landscape of the Inca: The Huacas and
Ceques of Cuzco
* 5.2: Jessica Joyce Christie: Rock Shrines, Ceque Lines, and
Pilgrimage in the Inca Provinces
* 5.3: Zachary J. Chase: The Inca State and Local Ritual Landscapes
* 5.4: Jason Yaeger and José María López Bejarano: Inca Sacred
Landscapes in the Titicaca Basin
* 5.5: Pablo Mignone: Peregrination and Rituality in the Southern
Provinces
* 5.6: Sonia Alconini and R. Alan Covey: Conclusions: Sacred
Geographies and Imperial Expansion
* PART 6. ART, ICONOGRAPHY, AND RECORD-KEEPING
* 6.1: Adam Herring: Inca Aesthetics and Scholarly Inquiry
* 6.2: Gary Urton: Quipus and Yupanas as Imperial Registers: Reckoning
and Recording in Tahuantinsuyu
* 6.3: Jean-Pierre Protzen: The Development and Variation of Inca
Architecture
* 6.4: Elena Phipps: Garments, Tocapu, Status, and Identity: Inca and
Colonial Perspectives
* 6.5: Mariusz Ziólkowski: The Iconography and Use of Inca and Colonial
Drinking Vessels
* 6.6: R. Alan Covey and Sonia Alconini: Conclusions: Civilizing the
Incas
* PART 7. THE COLONIAL ERA: CONTINUITY, CHANGE, AND ADAPTATION
* 7.1: Steven A. Wernke: Transformations: Evangelization, Resettlement,
and Community Organization in the Early Viceroyalty of Peru
* 7.2: Melissa S. Murphy: Colonial Demography and Bioarchaeology
* 7.3: Vincent R. Lee: Vilcabamba: Last Stronghold of the Inca
* 7.4: David T. Garrett: Inca Ancestry and Colonial Privilege
* 7.5: R. Alan Covey and Sonia Alconini: Conclusions: Colonial Incas
and the Myths of Conquest
* PART 8. THE MANY USES OF THE INCA PAST IN THE PRESENT
* 8.1: Stefanie Gänger: Inca "Antiquities" in the Nineteenth and Early
Twentieth Centuries
* 8.2: Lucy C. Salazar and Richard L. Burger: Reinventing the Incas in
Contemporary Cuzco: The Cases of Inti Raymi and Machu Picchu
* 8.3: Catherine Elisabeth Covey: Performances of "Pasts": Spaces of
Indigeneity and Heritage Tourism in Cuzco
* 8.4: Sonia Alconini and R. Alan Covey: Conclusions: Appropriating the
Inca -- The Complexities of Social Memory
* Index
* Introduction
* PART 1. THE ORIGINS AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE INCA EMPIRE
* 1.1: Joanne Pillsbury: Writing Inca History: The Colonial Era
* 1.2: Jerry D. Moore: Andean Statecraft before the Incas
* 1.3: R. Alan Covey: The Spread of Inca Power in the Cuzco Region
* 1.4: Ian Farrington: Cuzco: Development of the Imperial Capital
* 1.5: R. Alan Covey and Sonia Alconini: Conclusions: Retracing the
Intellectual Journey of Inca Origins
* PART 2. ROYAL ESTATES AND INCA IMPERIAL CENTERS
* 2.1: Kylie E. Quave: Royal Estates and Imperial Centers in the Cuzco
Region
* 2.2: János Gyarmati and Carola Condarco: Inca Imperial Strategies and
Installations in Central Bolivia
* 2.3: Lawrence Coben: The Inca Center of Incallacta in the
Southeastern Andes
* 2.4: Tamara L. Bray and José Echeverría: The Inca Centers of
Tomebamba and Caranqui in Northern Chinchaysuyu
* 2.5: Peter Eeckhout and Enrique López-Hurtado: Pachacamac and the
Incas on the Coast of Peru
* 2.6: Sonia Alconini and R. Alan Covey: Conclusions: The Political
Economy of Royal Estates and Imperial Centers in the Heartland and
More Distant Provinces
* PART 3. INCA HARD POWER: MILITARISM, ECONOMY, AND POLITICAL
HIERARCHIES
* 3.1: Terence N. D'Altroy: Inca Political Organization, Economic
Institutions, and Infrastructure
* 3.2: Steve Kosiba: Cultivating Empire: Inca Intensive Agricultural
Strategies
* 3.3: Amanda S. Aland: Fishing Economies and Ethnic Specialization
under Inca Rule
* 3.4: Bethany L. Turner and Barbara R. Hewitt: The Acllacona and
Mitmacona: Diet, Ethnicity, and Status
* 3.5: Cathy Lynne Costin: Gender and Status in Inca Textile and
Ceramic Craft Production
* 3.6: Justin Jennings and Guy Duke: Making the Typical Exceptional:
The Elevation of Inca Cuisine
* 3.7: R. Alan Covey and Sonia Alconini: Conclusions: Reassessing Inca
Hard Power
* PART 4. INCA IMPERIAL IDENTITIES: COLONIZATION, RESISTANCE, AND
HYBRIDITY
* 4.1: Félix A. Acuto and Iván Leibowicz: Inca Colonial Encounters and
Incorporation in Northern Argentina
* 4.2: Calogero M. Santoro and Mauricio Uribe: Inca Imperial
Colonization in Northern Chile
* 4.3: Colleen Zori: Inca Mining and Metal Production
* 4.4: Dennis E. Ogburn: Chinchaysuyu and the Northern Inca Territory
* 4.5: Sonia Alconini: Inca Advances into the Southeastern Tropics: The
Inca Frontier in Perspective
* 4.6: Inge Schjellerup: Inca Transformations of the Chachapoya Region
* 4.7: Andrés Troncoso: Inca Landscapes of Domination: Rock Art and
Community in North-Central Chile
* 4.8: Sonia Alconini and R. Alan Covey: Conclusions: Inca Imperial
Identities -- Colonization, Resistance, and Hybridity
* PART 5. SACRED LANDSCAPES
* 5.1: Brian S. Bauer: The Ritual Landscape of the Inca: The Huacas and
Ceques of Cuzco
* 5.2: Jessica Joyce Christie: Rock Shrines, Ceque Lines, and
Pilgrimage in the Inca Provinces
* 5.3: Zachary J. Chase: The Inca State and Local Ritual Landscapes
* 5.4: Jason Yaeger and José María López Bejarano: Inca Sacred
Landscapes in the Titicaca Basin
* 5.5: Pablo Mignone: Peregrination and Rituality in the Southern
Provinces
* 5.6: Sonia Alconini and R. Alan Covey: Conclusions: Sacred
Geographies and Imperial Expansion
* PART 6. ART, ICONOGRAPHY, AND RECORD-KEEPING
* 6.1: Adam Herring: Inca Aesthetics and Scholarly Inquiry
* 6.2: Gary Urton: Quipus and Yupanas as Imperial Registers: Reckoning
and Recording in Tahuantinsuyu
* 6.3: Jean-Pierre Protzen: The Development and Variation of Inca
Architecture
* 6.4: Elena Phipps: Garments, Tocapu, Status, and Identity: Inca and
Colonial Perspectives
* 6.5: Mariusz Ziólkowski: The Iconography and Use of Inca and Colonial
Drinking Vessels
* 6.6: R. Alan Covey and Sonia Alconini: Conclusions: Civilizing the
Incas
* PART 7. THE COLONIAL ERA: CONTINUITY, CHANGE, AND ADAPTATION
* 7.1: Steven A. Wernke: Transformations: Evangelization, Resettlement,
and Community Organization in the Early Viceroyalty of Peru
* 7.2: Melissa S. Murphy: Colonial Demography and Bioarchaeology
* 7.3: Vincent R. Lee: Vilcabamba: Last Stronghold of the Inca
* 7.4: David T. Garrett: Inca Ancestry and Colonial Privilege
* 7.5: R. Alan Covey and Sonia Alconini: Conclusions: Colonial Incas
and the Myths of Conquest
* PART 8. THE MANY USES OF THE INCA PAST IN THE PRESENT
* 8.1: Stefanie Gänger: Inca "Antiquities" in the Nineteenth and Early
Twentieth Centuries
* 8.2: Lucy C. Salazar and Richard L. Burger: Reinventing the Incas in
Contemporary Cuzco: The Cases of Inti Raymi and Machu Picchu
* 8.3: Catherine Elisabeth Covey: Performances of "Pasts": Spaces of
Indigeneity and Heritage Tourism in Cuzco
* 8.4: Sonia Alconini and R. Alan Covey: Conclusions: Appropriating the
Inca -- The Complexities of Social Memory
* Index