All anthropologists and archaeologists seek to answer basic
questions about human beings and society. Why do people behave the
way they do? Why do patterns in the behavior of individuals and
groups sometimes persist for remarkable periods of time? Why do
patterns in behavior sometimes change?
A Hopi Social History explores these basic questions in a unique
way. The discussion is constructed around a historically ordered
series of case studies from a single sociocultural system (the
Hopi) in order to understand better the multiplicity of processes
at work in any sociocultural system through time. The case studies
investigate the mysterious abandonments of the Western Pueblo
region in late prehistory, the initial impact of European diseases
on the Hopis, Hopi resistance to European domination between 1680
and 1880, the split of Oraibi village in 1906, and some responses
by the Hopis to modernization in the twentieth century.
These case studies provide a forum in which the authors examine
a number of theories and conceptions of culture to determine which
theories are relevant to which kinds of persistence and change.
With this broad theoretical synthesis, the book will be of interest
to students and scholars in the social sciences.
Scott Rushforth is associate professor of anthropology at New
Mexico State University. Steadman Upham is professor of
anthropology and vice provost and dean of the graduate school at
the University of Oregon.
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