scholarly journals The Concept of Mania in Traditional Andean Culture

2019 ◽  
Vol 176 (5) ◽  
pp. 338-340 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marucela Juana Uscamayta Ayvar ◽  
Rodolfo Sanchez Garrafa ◽  
Javier I. Escobar ◽  
Gabriel A. de Erausquin
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Adam Herring

This chapter discusses the interpretive challenges that art historians and anthropologists have faced in approaching Inca intellectual and artistic achievements, which do not fit comfortably in Western categories. George Kubler took up the question of Inca art in the mid-twentieth century, creating a space in art history for studying the Incas. This development occurred at a time when archaeologists such as John Rowe worked to place the Incas within the broader context of Andean civilizations, and structuralists like Tom Zuidema were beginning to challenge historical narratives in search of underlying elements of Andean culture. The scholarly interest in Inca art, material culture, and intellect was but one aspect of the Inca focus of that time, as artists found inspiration in Inca ruins and museum galleries in the United States, and other countries began to exhibit Inca artifacts as an art to be approached on its own terms.


1949 ◽  
Vol 29 (4) ◽  
pp. 598-600
Author(s):  
John Howland Rowe

Author(s):  
Wendell Clark Bennett ◽  
Junius Bouton Bird

1951 ◽  
Vol 16 (4) ◽  
pp. 353-354 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gordon R. Willey

Rowe (1950) in his review of Andean Culture History by W. C. Bennett and J. B. Bird, 1949, makes certain critical observations on the use of the horizon style concept as a unifying device in the reconstruction of Peru-Bolivian prehistory. Not only Bennett but Kroeber (1944) and I (Willey, 1948) are included in these analytical criticisms. As this is a subject of general importance to Andean archaeology, and in view of my stand on it, I would like to call attention to some of my previously expressed ideas.


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