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Crucibles of power: Forging copper and forging subjects at the Moche Ceremonial Center of Huaca Colorada,Peru
Authors:Edward Reuben Swenson  John P. Warner
Affiliation:1. University of Toronto, Department of Anthropology, 19 Russell Street, Toronto, ON, Canada M5S 2S2;2. University of Kentucky, Department of Anthropology, 211 Lafferty Hall, Lexington KY 40508, United States
Abstract:An analysis of copper production, architectural construction, and feasting rites as interrelated ritual activities at the Late Moche site of Huaca Colorada suggests that power asymmetries were embedded in a distinctive relational ontology and sacrificial worldview. Power was exercised not by alienating communities from their means of production or excluding the majority lower class from the diacritical symbols of power. Rather, the manufacture of copper items enabled subjects to directly contribute to Moche rites of regeneration and social reproduction; the skilled metamorphosis of copper into finished objects paralleled and symbolically reinforced the ritual re-formation of bodies and political subjectivities at Huaca Colorada. Ultimately, an examination of copper production at Huaca Colorada as a ritual of bodily transformation sheds light on the culturally specific structures of power characterizing the greater Jequetepeque region during the Late Moche Period.
Keywords:Moche   Copper   Metallurgy   Relational ontology   Political subjectivity   Sacrifice   Ritual   Feasting   Architecture   Personhood
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