Preface | p. xi |
The Chumash at a Crossroads: Theoretical Considerations | p. 1 |
Significance of Research | p. 3 |
Overview of the Chumash | p. 6 |
Development of Chumash Sociopolitical Complexity | p. 9 |
Theoretical Considerations | p. 11 |
The Environment and Its Management | p. 17 |
Resources in the Santa Barbara Channel Region | p. 19 |
The Chumash as Environmental Managers | p. 32 |
Environmental Changes During the Historic Period | p. 33 |
Cultural Setting | p. 37 |
Early Documents | p. 38 |
Archaeological Research on the Mainland | p. 42 |
Social Sphere of the Chumash | p. 54 |
Economic Networks | p. 60 |
Chiefs and Power | p. 62 |
Historic Chumash Settlements on the Mainland Coast | p. 65 |
Population Figures for the Chumash | p. 65 |
Noqto | p. 70 |
Shilimaqshtush | p. 74 |
Shisholop North | p. 75 |
Texax | p. 76 |
Kashtayit | p. 76 |
'Onomyo | p. 77 |
Tajiguas | p. 78 |
Qasil | p. 78 |
Dos Pueblos: Mikiw and Kuya'mu | p. 80 |
Goleta Slough Settlements | p. 84 |
Syuxtun | p. 93 |
Shalawa | p. 96 |
Q'oloq' | p. 97 |
Mishopshno | p. 97 |
Shuku | p. 100 |
Shisholop South | p. 102 |
Muwu | p. 104 |
Lisiqishi | p. 107 |
Sumo | p. 107 |
Lojostogni | p. 108 |
Humaliwo | p. 108 |
Summary | p. 109 |
Village and Household Organization | p. 113 |
Ethnohistoric and Ethnographic Descriptions of Village Organization and Structures | p. 114 |
Archaeological Evidence for Village Organization and Structures | p. 126 |
Evidence for Production and Consumption at the Household and Village Level | p. 149 |
Subsistence and Feasting | p. 151 |
Dietary Overview | p. 152 |
Gender Roles | p. 178 |
Helo': Plant Use at Contact | p. 166 |
The Significance of Storage | p. 174 |
Feasting | p. 179 |
Colonial Influence and the Persistence of Native Traditions | p. 187 |
Summary | p. 189 |
Rank, Ritual, and Power | p. 191 |
Ethnohistoric and Ethnographic Perspectives on Chiefs, Elites, and Commoners | p. 192 |
Mortuary Symbolism, Rank, and Religious Power | p. 201 |
Religious Power | p. 213 |
Gender | p. 216 |
Manifestations of Power | p. 219 |
Economics and Exchange: Manifestations of Wealth Finance | p. 223 |
Contexts of Exchange | p. 224 |
Shell Beads as Indicators of Wealth and Rank | p. 229 |
Theoretical Considerations Concerning Chumash Exchange | p. 234 |
Significance of Canoes | p. 235 |
Centers of Exchange | p. 239 |
Prestige Goods and Wealth Finance | p. 243 |
Network Power and Social Storage | p. 247 |
Conflict and Social Integration | p. 249 |
Evidence for Warfare in Ethnohistoric and Ethnographic Accounts | p. 250 |
Bioarchaeological Evidence of Violence among the Chumash | p. 261 |
Mechanisms of Social Integration | p. 264 |
Methods of Social Control | p. 266 |
Theoretical Perspectives on Chumash Warfare | p. 269 |
The Chumash, Pomo, and Patwin: Comparative Analysis and Final Thoughts | p. 275 |
Complex Hunter-Gatherers: The Chumash Example | p. 276 |
Resource Abundance and Sociopolitical Complexity | p. 277 |
Power Strategies of the Chumash | p. 279 |
Network Power | p. 280 |
Emergent Complexity and the Relationship of the Island and Mainland Chumash | p. 283 |
Sociopolitical Complexity among Hunter-Gatherers in California | p. 287 |
Future Studies of Complex Hunter-Gatherers | p. 301 |
Notes | p. 303 |
References | p. 309 |
Index | p. 345 |
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