Vegetable Storage Practices and the Reproduction of Household Autonomy in Early Village Contexts from Northwest Argentina

2. Zero hunger EARLY VILLAGE SOCIETIES ETHNOARCHAEOLOGY NORTHWEST ARGENTINA https://purl.org/becyt/ford/6.1 HOUSEHOLD https://purl.org/becyt/ford/6 0601 history and archaeology 06 humanities and the arts 15. Life on land STORAGE
DOI: 10.15640/jaa.v6n1a2 Publication Date: 2018-08-09T07:03:06Z
ABSTRACT
Fil: Salazar, Julián. Universidad Nacional de Cordoba. Facultad de Filosofia y Humanidades. Centro de Investigaciones; Argentina. Centro de Estudios Históricos "Profesor Carlos S. A. Segreti"; Argentina<br/>Fil: Molar Becchio, Rocío María. Universidad Nacional de Cordoba. Facultad de Filosofia y Humanidades. Centro de Investigaciones; Argentina. Centro de Estudios Históricos "Profesor Carlos S. A. Segreti"; Argentina<br/>Storage is an extended and variable practice which constitutes a key aspect for understanding economic strategies, social structures, and political negotiations in different cultural and temporal settings, but especially in the context of early village societies. Despite the fact that it was traditionally addressed as an evidence of the emergence of elites with the power to hoard and redistribute social surpluses, we herein address the role of storage where this social consequence was not recorded. We present new archaeological data on Tafí valley early village vegetable storage practices which is interpreted in the light of the ethnoarchaeological study case of household storage features, pirhuas, still used by Diaguita peasants from the nearby Anfama valley. Domestic and productive architectural features, pottery assemblages and botanical microremains were analyzed in order to discuss surplus generation, vegetable products control and household autonomy in the context of South Andean early villages.<br/>
SUPPLEMENTAL MATERIAL
Coming soon ....
REFERENCES (0)
CITATIONS (3)