Hostname: page-component-77c89778f8-vsgnj Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-20T05:49:26.292Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Exploring the Longhouse and Community in Tribal Society

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Jodie A. O'Gorman*
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology and Michigan State University Museum, 354 Baker Hall, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824

Abstract

Archaeology offers a unique opportunity to explore the ways humans have created, lived within, and changed their communities. Recent research indicates important theoretical distinctions in the way in which archaeologists conceive of community, and further development of nontraditional theoretical models is necessary to improve our ability to understand communities of the past. This study offers a reconsideration of community that focuses on the incorporation of multiple spatial scales with social dynamics. Through the use of ethnographic and ethnohistoric examples, the link between community and spatial relationships in longhouse-using tribal societies is examined. A case study of community from the Oneota tradition of the North American midcontinent is then reconsidered using insights into kinds of community situated at and affecting multiple spatial scales. The reanalysis emphasizes the way human relationships in multiple social contexts created a multitude of spatially situated community links, and illustrates the importance of using alternative theoretical approaches.

Resumen

Resumen

La arqueología nos ofrece una oportunidad única para explorar las maneras en que los seres humanos han creado, vivido, y cambiado sus comunidades. Investigaciones recientes indican distinciones teóricas importantes en las maneras en que los arqueólogos conciben la comunidad, y es necesario desarrollar modelos teóricos no tradicionales para mejorar nuestra capacidad de comprender comunidades del pasado. Este estudio nos ofrece una reconsideración del concepto de la comunidad, enfocándose en la incorporación de múltiples escalas espaciales con dinámicas sociales. Usando ejemplos etnográficos así como etnohistoricos, se examina el vinculo entre la comunidad y relaciones espaciales en sociedades tribales de casa comunitaria (longhouse). Luego, vemos un estudio de caso examinando una comunidad de la tradición Oneota del continente Norteamericano, utilizando perspectivas de las relaciones humanas que se sitúan y afectan a múltiples escalas sociales. El análisis pone énfasis en cómo los múltiples contextos sociales de relaciones humanas han creado una multitud de vínculos comunitarios ubicados espacialmente, e ilustra la importancia de usar enfoques teóricos alternativos.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Society for American Archaeology 2010

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

References Cited

Adler, Michael 2002 Building Consensus: Tribes, Architecture, and Typology in the American Southwest. In The Archaeology of Tribal Societies, edited by William A. Parkinson, pp. 155172. International Monographs in Prehistory, Ann Arbor.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Amit, Vered 2002 An Anthropology Without Community? In The Trouble with Community: Anthropological Reflections on Movement, Identity and Collectivity, edited by Vered Amit and Nigel Rapport, pp. 1370. Pluto Press, London.Google Scholar
Anderson, Benedict 1983 Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism. Verso, London.Google Scholar
Arzigian, Constance M., Boszhardt, Robert F., Halverson, Holly P., and Theler, James L. 1994 The Gunderson Site: An Oneota Village and Cemetery in La Crosse, Wisconsin. Journal of the IowaArche-ological Society 41:375.Google Scholar
Ashmore, Wendy, and Wilk, Richard R. 1988 Household and Community in the Mesoamerican Past. In Household and Community in the Mesoamerican Past, edited by Richard R. Wilk and Wendy Ashmore, pp. 127. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque.Google Scholar
Austin, Frederic Robert 1977 Iban Migration: Patterns of Mobility and Employment in the 20th Century. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, University of Michigan.Google Scholar
Bala, Poline 2002 Changing Borders and Identities in the Kelabit Highlands: Anthropological Reflections on Growing Up near an International Border. Unit Penerbitan Universiti Malaysia, Kota Samarahan.Google Scholar
Barth, Fredrik 1994 Enduring and Emerging Issues in the Analysis of Ethnicity. In The Anthropology of Ethnicity: Beyond “Ethnic Groups and Boundaries,” edited by Hans Vermeulen and Cora Govers, pp. 1132. Het Spinhuis, Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Barth, Fredrik (editor) 1969 Ethnic Groups and Boundaries. University Press, Oslo.Google Scholar
Binford, Lewis R. 1971 Mortuary Practices: Their Study and Their Potential. In Approaches to the Social Dimensions of Mortuary Practices, edited by James A. Brown, pp. 629. Memoirs of the Society for American Archaeology. Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Bogucki, Peter 2000 How Agriculture Came to North-Central Europe. In Europe’s First Farmers, edited by T. Douglas Price, pp. 197218. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bogucki, Peter 2002 A Neolithic Tribal Society in Northern Poland. In The Archaeology of Tribal Societies, edited by William A. Parkinson, pp. 372383. International Monographs in Prehistory, Ann Arbor.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boszhardt, Robert F. 1990 The Late Woodland Study Unit in Region 6, Western Wisconsin. The Mississippi Valley Archaeology Center. Reports of Investigations No. 115. La Crosse.Google Scholar
Boszhardt, Robert F. 1994 Oneota Group Continuity at La Crosse: The Brice Prairie, Pammel Creek and Valley View Phases. Wisconsin Archeologist 79(2):196226.Google Scholar
Boszhardt, Robert F. 2000 Turquoise, Rasps, and Heartlines: The Oneota Bison Pull. In Mounds, Modoc, and Mesoamerica: Papers in Honor of Melvin L. Fowler, edited by Steven R. Ahler, pp. 361373. Illinois State Museum Scientific Papers, Vol. 27. Springfield.Google Scholar
Bourdieu, Pierre 1973 The Berber House. In Rules and Meaning, edited by M. Douglas, pp. 98110. Penguin, Harmondsworth, U.K. Google Scholar
Bourdieu, Pierre 1977 Outline of a Theory of Practice. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, James A., and Sasso, Robert F. 2001 Prelude to History on the Eastern Prairies. In Societies in Eclipse: Archaeology of the Eastern Woodlands Indians, A.D. 1400–1700, edited by David S. Brose, C. Wesley Cowan, and Robert C. Mainfort, pp. 205228. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Canuto, Marcello A., and Yaeger, Jason (editors) 2000 The Archaeology of Communities: A New World Perspective. Routledge, New York.Google Scholar
Carsten, Janet 1995 Houses in Langkawi: Stable Structures or Mobile Homes? In About the House—Levi-Strauss and Beyond, edited by Janet Carsten and Stephen Hugh-Jones, pp. 105128. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carsten, Janet, and Hugh-Jones, Stephen 1995 Introduction: About the House—Levi-Strauss and Beyond. In About the House—Levi-Strauss and Beyond, edited by Janet Carsten and Stephen Hugh-Jones, pp. 146. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chance, John K. 2000 The Noble House in Colonial Puebla, Mexico: Descent, Inheritance, and the Nahua Tradition. American Anthropologist 102(3):485502.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chang, Kwang-Chih 1958 Study of the Neolithic Social Grouping: Examples from the New World. American Anthropologist 60(2):298334.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chang, Kwang-Chih 1968 Settlement Archaeology. National Press Books, Palo Alto.Google Scholar
Cheruvelil, Jubin 2005 Ritual Behavior Material Dynamics Among the Western Wisconsin Oneota. Paper presented at the 51 st Annual Midwest Archaeological Conference, Dayton.Google Scholar
Cohen, Anthony P. 1985 The Symbolic Construction of Community. Routledge, London.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coudart, Anick 1991 Social Structure and Relationships in Prehistoric Small-Scale Sedentary Societies: The Banderkeramic Groups in Neolithic Europe. In Between Bands and States, edited by Susan A. Gregg, pp. 395420. Center for Archaeological Investigations, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale.Google Scholar
Creed, Gerald W. 2006 Reconsidering Community. In The Seductions of Community: Emancipations, Oppressions, Quandaries, edited by Gerald W. Creed, pp. 322. School of American Research Press, Santa Fe. Google Scholar
Deetz, James 1965 The Dynamics of Stylistic Change in Arikara Ceramics. University of Illinois Press, Chicago.Google Scholar
Divale, William T., Chamberis, Frosine, and Gangloff, Deborah 1976 War, Peace, and Marital Residence in Pre-Industrial Societies. Journal of Conflict Resolution 20(1):5778.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dove, Michael 1985 Swidden Agriculture in Indonesia: The Subsistence Strategies of the Kalimantan Kantu’. Mouton, New York.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Durrenberger, E. Paul 1992 The Dynamics of Medieval Iceland: Political Econ omy and Literature. University of Iowa Press, Iowa City.Google Scholar
Ember, Melvin 1973 An Archaeological Indicator of Matrilocal Versus Patrilocal Residence. American Antiquity 38:177182.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fenton, William N. 1951 Locality as a Basic Factor in the Development of Iroquois Social Structure. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 149(3):3554.Google Scholar
Fenton, William N. 1978 Northern Iroquoian Culture Patterns. In Northeast, edited by Bruce G. Trigger, pp. 296321. Handbook of North American Indians, Vol. 15, W. C. Sturtevant, general editor, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Flannery, Kent V. 1976 The Early Mesoamerican Village. Academic Press. New York.Google Scholar
Fletcher, Roland 1986 Settlement Archaeology: World-Wide Comparisons. World Archaeology 18(1):5983.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Freeman, Derek 1955 Report on the Iban of Sarawak: lban Social Organization. Government Printing Office, Kuching.Google Scholar
Gallagher, James P. 1992 Prehistoric Field Systems in the Upper Midwest. In Late Prehistoric Agriculture, edited by William I. Woods, pp. 95135. Studies in Illinois Archaeology No. 8. Illinois Historic Preservation Agency, Springfield.Google Scholar
Gallagher, James P., and Arzigian, Constance M. 1994 A New Perspective on Late Prehistoric Agricultural Intensification in the Upper Mississippi River Valley. In Agricultural Origins and Development in the Midcontinent, edited by William Green, pp. 171188. Office of the State Archaeologist, Report 19. University of Iowa, Iowa City.Google Scholar
Gallagher, James P., Arzigian, Constance M., Boszhardt, Robert F., Moffat, Charles R., and Theler, James L. 1992 Phase III Excavations at the Tremaine Site, 47LC95, the Midvale Interceptor Project. Reports of Investigations No. 133. Mississippi Valley Archaeology Center, University of Wisconsin, La Crosse.Google Scholar
Gallagher, James P., Boszhardt, Robert F., Sasso, Robert, and Stevenson, Katherine 1985 Oneota Ridged Field Agriculture in Southwestern Wisconsin. American Antiquity 50(3):605612.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gallagher, James P., Rodell, Roland, and Stevenson, Katherine 1982 The 1980–1982 La Crosse Area Archaeological Survey. Reports of Investigations No. 2. Mississippi Valley Archaeology Center, University of Wisconsin, La Crosse.Google Scholar
Gallagher, James P., and Sasso, Robert F. 1987 Investigations into Oneota Ridged Field Agriculture on the Northern Margin of the Prairie Peninsula. Plains Anthropologist 32(116):141151.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gallagher, James P., Stevenson, Katherine, Fassler, Heidi, Hill, Christopher, Mills, Margaret, Morrow, Toby, Motivans, Karene, Neff, Sherry, Weeth, Teresa, and Withrow, Randall 1981 The Overhead Site, 47-Lc-20. Report prepared for the State Historical Society of Wisconsin, Madison.Google Scholar
Gibbon, Guy E., and Dobbs, Clark A. 1991 The Mississippian Presence in the Red Wing Area, Minnesota. In New Perspectives on Cahokia: Views from the Peripheries, edited by James B. Stoltman, pp. 281306. Monographs in World Archaeology No. 2. Prehistory Press, Madison, Wisconsin.Google Scholar
Gillespie, Susan D. 2000a Beyond Kinship: An Introduction. In Beyond Kinship: Social and Material Reproduction in House Societies, edited by Rosemary A. Joyce and Susan D. Gillespie, pp. 121. University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Gillespie, Susan D. 2000b Rethinking Ancient Maya Social Organization: Replacing “Lineage” with “House.” American Anthropologist 102(3):467484.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goldstein, Lynne G. 1981 One-Dimensional Archaeology and Multi-Dimensional People: Spatial Organization and Mortuary Analysis. In The Archaeology of Death, edited by Robert Chapman, Ian Kinnes, and Klavs Randsborg, pp. 5369. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Grauer, Anne L. 1995 Appendix 9: Tremaine Skeletal Data. In The Tremaine Site Complex: Oneota Occupation in the La Crosse Locality, Wisconsin, Vol. 3: The Tremaine Site (47Lc95), by Jodie A. O’Gorman, pp. 409421. Archaeological Research Series No. 3. Museum Archaeology Program, State Historical Society of Wisconsin, Madison.Google Scholar
Green, William 1993 Examining Protohistoric Depopulation in the Upper Midwest. Wisconsin Archeologist 74(1—4):284317.Google Scholar
Grinker, Roy Richard 1994 Houses in the Rain Forest: Ethnicity and Inequality Among Farmers and Foragers in Central Africa. University of California Press, Berkeley.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gronenborn, Detlef 1999 A Variation on a Basic Theme: The Transition to Farming in Southern Central Europe. Journal of World Prehistory 13:123210.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heidenreich, Conrad E. 1971 Huronia: A History and Geography of the Huron Indians 1600–1650. McClelland and Stewart, Toronto.Google Scholar
Heidenreich, Conrad E. 1978 Huron. In Northeast, edited by Bruce G. Trigger, pp. 368388. Handbook of North American Indians, Vol. 15, William C. Sturtevant, general editor, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Hill, James N. 1970 Broken K Pueblo: Prehistoric Social Organization in the American Southwest. University of Arizona Anthropological Papers, 18. Tucson.Google Scholar
Hirsch, Eric, and O’Hanlon, Michael 1995 The Anthropology of Landscape: Perspectives on Place and Space. Clarendon Press, Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hollinger, R. Eric 1993 Investigating Oneota Residence Through Domestic Architecture. Unpublished Master’s thesis, University of Missouri, Columbia.Google Scholar
Hollinger, R. Eric 1995 Residence Patterns and Oneota Cultural Dynamics. In Oneota Archaeology: Past, Present, and Future, edited by William Green, pp. 141174. Office of the State Archaeologist, Report 20. University of Iowa, Iowa City.Google Scholar
Hong, Evelyn 1987 Natives of Sarawak: Survival in Borneo’s Vanishing Forest. Institut Masyarakat, Penang, Malaysia.Google Scholar
Horning, Audrey J. 2000 Archaeological Considerations of “Appalachian” Identity: Community-Based Archaeology in the Blue Ridge Mountains. In The Archaeology of Communities: A New World Perspective, edited by M. A. Canuto and J. Yaeger, pp. 210230. Routledge, New York.Google Scholar
Isbell, William H. 2000 What We Should Be Studying: The “Imagined Community” and the “Natural Community.” In The Archaeology of Communities: A New World Perspective, edited by Marcello A. Canuto and Jason Yaeger, pp. 243266. Routledge, New York.Google Scholar
Joyce, Rosemary A., and Hendon, Julia A. 2000 Heterarchy, History, and Material Reality: “Communities” in Late Classic Honduras. In The Archaeology of Communities: A New World Perspective, edited by Marcello A. Canuto and Jason Yaeger, pp. 143160. Routledge, New York.Google Scholar
Kapches, Mima 1990 Spatial Dynamics of Ontario Iroquoian Longhouses. American Antiquity 55(1):4967.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Keeley, Lawrence H. 2002 Some Aspects of the Social Organization of the LBK of Belgium. In The Archaeology of Tribal Societies, edited by William A. Parkinson, pp. 384390. International Monographs in Prehistory, Ann Arbor.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kolb, Michael J., and Snead, James E. 1997 It’s a Small World After All: Comparative Analyses of Community Organization in Archaeology. American Antiquity 62:609628.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lea, Vanessa 1995 The Houses of the Mebengokre (Kayapo) of Central Brazil—A New Door to Their Social Organization. In About the House—Levi-Strauss and Beyond, edited by Janet Carsten and Stephen Hugh-Jones, pp. 206225. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lévi-Strauss, Claude 1982 The Way of the Masks. Translated by Sylvia Modelski. University of Washington Press, Seattle.Google Scholar
Lévi-Strauss, Claude 1987 Anthropology and Myth: Lectures 1951–1982. Translated by Roy Willis. Basil Blackwell, Oxford.Google Scholar
Longacre, William A. 1968 Some Aspects of Prehistoric Society in East-Central Arizona. In New Perspectives in Archaeology, edited by Sally R. Binford and Lewis R. Binford, pp. 89102. Aldine, Chicago.Google Scholar
Low, Setha M., and Lawrence-Zuniga, Denise 2003 Locating Culture. In The Anthropology of Space and Place: Locating Culture, edited by Setha M. Low and Denise Lawrence-Zuniga, pp. 147. Blackwell, Maiden, Massachusetts.Google Scholar
Marshall, Yvonne 2000 Transformations of Nuu-chah-nulth Houses. In Beyond Kinship: Social and Material Reproduction in House Societies, edited by Rosemary A. Joyce and Susan D. Gillespie, pp. 73102. University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Mason, Carol I. 1976 Historic Identification and Lake Winnebago Focus Oneota. In Cultural Change and Continuity: Essays in Honor of James B. Griffin, edited by Charles E. Cleland, pp. 335348. Academic Press, New York.Google Scholar
Mason, Ronald J. 1993 Oneota and Winnebago Ethnogenesis: An Overview. Wisconsin Archeologist 74:400421.Google Scholar
McKinnon, Susan 1991 From a Shattered Sun: Hierarchy, Gender, and Alliance in the Tanimbar Islands. University of Wisconsin Press, Madison.Google Scholar
Milner, George R., Anderson, Eve, and Smith, Virginia G. 1991 Warfare in Late Prehistoric West-Central Illinois. American Antiquity 56:581603.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morgan, Lewis Henry 1851 League of the Ho-de’-no-sau-nee, Iroquois. Sage and Brothers, Rochester, New York.Google Scholar
Morgan, Lewis Henry 1881 Houses and House-Life of the American Aborigines. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Mott, Mildred 1938 The Relation of Historic Indian Tribes to Archaeological Manifestations in Iowa. Iowa Journal of History and Politics 36:227314.Google Scholar
Murdock, George Peter 1949 Social Structure. Macmillan, New York.Google Scholar
O’Gorman, Jodie A. 1993 The Tremaine Site Complex: Oneota Occupation in the La Crosse Locality, Wisconsin, Vol. 1: The OT Site (47Lc262). Archaeological Research Series No. 1. Museum Archaeology Program, State Historical Society of Wisconsin, Madison.Google Scholar
O’Gorman, Jodie A. 1994 The Tremaine Site Complex: Oneota Occupation in the La Crosse Locality, Wisconsin, Vol. 2: The Filler Site (47Lcl49). Archaeological Research Series No. 2. Museum Archaeology Program, State Historical Society of Wisconsin, Madison.Google Scholar
O’Gorman, Jodie A. 1995 The Tremaine Site Complex: Oneota Occupation in the La Crosse Locality, Wisconsin, Vol. 3: The Tremaine Site (47Lc95). Archaeological Research Series No. 3. Museum Archaeology Program, State Historical Society of Wisconsin, Madison.Google Scholar
O’Gorman, Jodie A. 1996 Domestic Economics and Mortuary Practices: A Gendered View of Oneota Social Organization. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee.Google Scholar
O’Gorman, Jodie A. 2001 Life, Death, and the Longhouse: A Gendered View of Oneota Social Organization. In Gender and the Archaeology of Death, edited by Bettina Arnold and Nancy L. Wicker, pp. 2349. AltaMira, Walnut Creek.Google Scholar
O’Shea, John M. 1989 Pawnee Archaeology. Central Plains Archeology 1(1):49107.Google Scholar
Overstreet, David F. 1995 The Eastern Wisconsin Oneota Regional Continuity. In Oneota Archaeology: Past, Present, and Future, edited by William Green, pp. 3364. University of Iowa, Iowa City.Google Scholar
Parkinson, William A. 2002 Introduction: Archaeology and Tribal Societies. In The Archaeology of Tribal Societies, edited by William A. Parkinson, pp. 112. International Monographs in Prehistory, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Parkinson, William A. 2006 Tribal Boundaries: Stylistic Variability and Social Boundary Maintenance During the Transition to the Copper Age on the Great Hungarian Plain. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 25:3358.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pauketat, Timothy R. 2000 Politicization and Community in the Pre-Columbian Mississippi Valley. In The Archaeology of Communities: A New World Perspective, edited by Marcello A. Canuto and Jason Yaeger, pp. 1643. Routledge, New York.Google Scholar
Peterson, Christian E., and Drennan, Robert D. 2005 Communities, Settlements, Sites, and Surveys: Regional-Scale Analysis of Prehistoric Human Interaction. American Antiquity 70(1):530.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Preucel, Robert W. 2000 Making Pueblo Communities: Architectural Discourse at Kotyiti, New Mexico. In The Archaeology of Communities: A New World Perspective, edited by Mar-cello A. Canuto and Jason Yaeger, pp. 5877. Routledge, New York.Google Scholar
Radin, Paul 1923 The Winnebago Tribe. Bureau of American Ethnology Annual Report 37:35560.Google Scholar
Redfield, Robert 1953 The Primitive Worldandlts Transformation. Cornell University Press, Ithaca.Google Scholar
Redfield, Robert 1955 The Little Community: Viewpoints for the Study of a Human Whole. University of Chicago Press, Chicago.Google Scholar
Redfield, Robert 1956 Peasant Society and Culture. University of Chicago Press, Chicago.Google Scholar
Rodell, Roland L. 1997 The Diamond Bluff Site Complex: Time and Tradition in the Northern Mississippi Valley. Unpublished Ph.D dissertation, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.Google Scholar
Rodell, Roland L. 2000 Patterns of Oneota Settlement Within the Middle Portion of the Upper Mississippi Valley. In Mounds, Modoc, and Mesoamerica: Papers in Honor of Melvin L. Fowler, edited by Steven R. Ahler, pp. 375400. Illinois State Museum Scientific Papers, Vol. 27. Springfield.Google Scholar
Sahlins, Marshall D. 1968 Tribesmen. Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey.Google Scholar
Sandin, Benedict 1980 Iban Adat and Augury. Penerbit Universiti Sains Malaysia for School of Comparative Social Sciences, Penang.Google Scholar
Schroeder, Sissel 2004 Current Research on Late Precontact Societies of the Midcontinental United States. Journal of Archaeological Research 12:311372.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Skinner, Alanson B. 1926 Ethnology of the Ioway Indians. Bulletin of the Public Museum of the City of Milwaukee 5(4):181354.Google Scholar
Smith, Kevin 1995 Landnam: The Settlement of Iceland in Archaeological and Historical Perspective. World Archaeology 26:319347.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Soja, Edward W. 1989 Postmodern Geographies: The Reassertion of Space in Critical Social Theory. Verso, New York.Google Scholar
Starna, William A., Hamell, George R., and Butts, William L. 1984 Northern Iroquoian Horticulture and Insect Infestation: A Cause for Village Removal. Ethnohistory 31(3):197207.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stevenson, Katherine 1994 Chronological and Settlement Aspects of the Valley View Site (47Lc-34). Wisconsin Archeologist 75:237284.Google Scholar
Steward, Julian H. 1951 Levels of Sociocultural Integration: An Operational Concept. Southwestern Journal of Anthropology 7:374390.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sutlive, Vinson H. Jr. 1978 The Iban of Sarawak: Chronicle of a Vanishing World. Waveland Press, Prospect Heights, Illinois.Google Scholar
Tooker, Elisabeth 1984 Women in Iroquois Society. In Extending the Rafters: Interdisciplinary Approaches to Iroquoian Studies, edited by Michael K. Foster, Jack Campisi, and Marianne Mithun, pp. 109123. State University of New York, Albany.Google Scholar
Tooker, Elisabeth 1991 An Ethnography of the Huron Indians, 1615–1649. Syracuse University Press, Syracuse.Google Scholar
Trigger, Bruce G. 1976 The Children of Aataentsic: A History of the Huron People to 1660. 2 vols. McGill-Queen’s University Press, Montreal.Google Scholar
Trigger, Bruce G. 1990 The Huron: Farmers of the North. 2nd ed. Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Orlando.Google Scholar
Tuan, Yi-Fu 1977 Space and Place: The Perspective of Experience. University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis.Google Scholar
Tubbs, Ryan M., and O’Gorman, Jodie A. 2005 Assessing Oneota Diet and Health: A Community and Lifeway Perspective. Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology 30:119163.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tuck, James A. 1978 Northern Iroquoian Prehistory. In Northeast, edited by Bruce G. Trigger, pp. 322333. Handbook of North American Indians, Vol. 15, W. C. Sturtevant, general editor, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Vradenburg, Joseph A. 1993 Skeletal Analysis of the Tremaine Site. Manuscript on file at the Museum Archaeology Program of the State Historical Society of Wisconsin, Madison.Google Scholar
Waterson, Roxana 1990 The Living House: An Anthropology of Architecture in South-East Asia. Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Wedel, Mildred Mott 1959 Oneota Sites on the Upper Iowa River. Missouri Archaeologist 21:24.Google Scholar
Wedel, Mildred Mott 1976 Ethnohistory: Its Payoffs and Pitfalls for Iowa Archeologists. Journal of the Iowa Archeological Society 23:144.Google Scholar
Wedel, Mildred Mott 1986 Peering at the Iowa Indians Through the Mist of Time. Journal of the Iowa Archeological Society 33:174.Google Scholar
Wilson, Diane 1997 Gender, Diet, Health, and Social Status in the Mississippian Powers Phase Turner Cemetery Population. In Women in Prehistory: North America and Mesoamerica, edited by Cheryl Claassen and Rosemary A. Joyce, pp. 119135. University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Wilson, Gilbert L. 1917 Agriculture of the Hidatsa Indians. University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis.Google Scholar
Yaeger, Jason 2000 The Social Construction of Communities in the Classic Maya Countryside: Strategies of Affiliation in Western Belize. In The Archaeology of Communities: A New World Perspective, edited by Marcello A. Canuto and Jason Yaeger, pp. 123142. Routledge, New York.Google Scholar
Zvelebil, Marek, and Lillie, Malcolm 2000 Transition to Agriculture in Eastern Europe. In Europe’s First Farmers, edited by T. Douglas Price, pp. 5792. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar