Cahokia: A World Renewal Cult Heterarchy

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University Press of Florida, 2006 - Social Science - 599 pages
Cahokia is located in the northern expanse of American Bottom, the largest of the Mississippian flood plains, and opposite St. Louis, Missouri. Byers overturns the current political characterization of this largest known North American prehistoric site north of Mexico. Rather than treating Cahokia as the seat of a dominant Native American polity, a paramount chiefdom, Byers argues that it must be given a religious characterization as a world renewal cult center. Furthermore, the social and economic powers that it manifests must not be seen to reside in Cahokia itself but in multiple world renewal cults distributed across the American Bottom and in the nearby upland regions. Byers argues that Cahokia can be thought of as an affiliation of mutually autonomous cults that pooled their labor and other resources and established their collective mission as the performance of world renewal rituals by which to maintain and enhance the sacred powers of the cosmos.

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About the author (2006)

A. Martin Byers is a research affiliate in anthropology at McGill University in Montreal. He is the author of The Ohio Hopewell Episode: Paradigm Lost, Paradigm Gained, and a contributor to several edited volumes, including Interacting with the Dead: Perspectives on Mortuary Archaeology for the New Millennium (UPF).

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