"With a great deal of extremely valuable information, excellent observations, and original insights, this book is certain to be a major contribution to Moche studies. The rise of complex society is a major focus of current anthropological and archaeological research. The Moche were the first group in Andean South America to develop a state organization. Documenting how this came about will be of great interest to scholars working on civilizations in many parts of the world. Bourget's arguments about the roles played by sacrifice, violence, and ideology will stimulate other scholars to explore how these factors may have been involved in the rise of complexity in other regions." -- Christopher B. Donnan, Emeritus of Anthropology, UCLA, and author of several books on the Moche, including Moche Portraits from Ancient Peru "This research brings to the archaeological community the first description of a sacrificial site for the Moche civilization. There is no parallel in South America for this type of site, and so the book will stand as a first example of human sacrifice as part of the ritual and political systems of a state-level complex society in the Andes. This book will be a landmark for Moche archaeology, and the role of human sacrifice, ritual violence, and ideology to legitimize rulers will be associated with this case study from the Peruvian north coast for a long time." -- Claude Chapdelaine, Professor of Archaeology, Universite de Montreal, and coeditor of Domestic Life in Prehispanic Capitals: A Study of of Specialization, Hierarchy, and Ethnicity
A world authority on the Moche, Steve Bourget is the author of Sex, Death, and Sacrifice in Moche Religion and Visual Culture and coeditor of The Art and Archaeology of the Moche: An Ancient Andean Society of the Peruvian North Coast.
"This book contains important contributions to our understanding of
the Moche culture…The arguments and information Bourget presents
are well worth reading."
*Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology*
"This book represents a key contribution to contemporary Moche
studies and Andean archeology, and more broadly to anyone studying
the archeology of ritual violence, ideology, funerary taphonomy,
social complexity, and art history, as it provides new dimensions
and possibilities for scholars to ponder in the years to come."
*Journal of Anthropological Research*
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