Takeshi Inomata is co-director of the Aguateca Archaeological Project and associate professor of anthropology at the University of Arizona. Daniela Triadan is co-director of the Aguateca Archaeological Project and associate professor of anthropology at the University of Arizona. She is also a research assistant with the Smithsonian Institute.
Request Academic Copy
Please copy the ISBN for submitting review copy form
Description
"This is a tour de force. Each author has clearly explained the subject of each chapter. The contextual analyses are unprecedented in their detail as a result of the special circumstances of preservation in the site core. The final syntheses are lucid and persuasive, written in the best tradition of Maya research." -David Freidel, Washington University at Saint Louis "This is writing of the highest caliber. There is no other publication in the Maya area that describes and interprets the activities of elites in such fine-grained detail, based on unusually well-preserved data. This volume will be consulted by scholars for many decades, and by generations of students." -Payson Sheets, University of Colorado, Boulder "I highly recommend this volume to scholars interested in Mesoamerica, complex societies, religion, politics, public performances, and craft specialization."-Journal of Anthropological Research

