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Archaeological case studies consider material evidence of religion
and ritual in the pre-Columbian Eastern Woodlands. Archaeologists
today are interpreting Native American religion and ritual in the
distant past in more sophisticated ways, considering new
understandings of the ways that Native Americans themselves
experienced them. Shaman, Priest, Practice, Belief: Materials of
Ritual and Religion in Eastern North America broadly considers
Native American religion and ritual in the eastern North America
and focuses on practices that altered and used a vast array of
material items as well as how physical spaces were shaped by
religious practices. Unbound to a single theoretical perspective of
religion, contributors approach ritual and religion in diverse
ways. Importantly, they focus on how people in the past practiced
religion by altering and using a vast array of material items, from
smoking pipes, ceremonial vessels, carved figurines, and
iconographic images, to sacred bundles, hallucinogenic plants,
revered animals, and ritual architecture. Contributors also show
how physical spaces were shaped by religious practice, and how rock
art, monuments, soils and special substances, and even land- and
cityscapes were part of the active material worlds of religious
agents. Case studies, arranged chronologically, cover time periods
ranging from the Paleoindian period (13,000-7900 BC) to the late
Mississippian and into the protohistoric/contact periods. The
geographical scope is much of the greater southeastern and southern
Midwestern culture areas of the Eastern Woodlands, from the Central
and Lower Mississippi River Valleys to the Ohio Hopewell region,
and from the greater Ohio River Valley down through the Deep South
and across to the Carolinas.
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