Using Cross-Media Approaches to Understand an Invisible Industry: How Cotton Production Influenced Pottery Designs and Kiva Murals in Cedar Mesa

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TitreUsing Cross-Media Approaches to Understand an Invisible Industry: How Cotton Production Influenced Pottery Designs and Kiva Murals in Cedar Mesa
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2016
AuteursCrabtree SA, Bellorado BA
JournalKIVA-JOURNAL OF SOUTHWESTERN ANTHROPOLOGY AND HISTORY
Volume82
Pagination174-200
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN0023-1940
Mots-clésAncestral Pueblo, Cotton, Domestication, Kiva murals, Pottery
Résumé

In this paper we present evidence through a cross-media and contextual comparison approach that cotton textile production had major economic and ideological importance to Ancestral Pueblo peoples living in the greater Cedar Mesa area during the Woodenshoe and Redhouse Phases (A.D. 1165-1270). First, we present the current data available for direct evidence of cotton textile production from archaeological contexts. Then, we use a cross-media approach to look for evidence of cotton textile production in the media of pottery and kiva mural design motifs. Given the extensive nature of cotton textile production at several sites in the area and the pervasive cotton-textile-based designs on pottery and in kiva murals in the area, we argue that the greater Cedar Mesa area was an important gateway for cotton technologies and imagery between the Kayenta and Mesa Verde areas that afforded the peoples greater access and control over cotton textile production and distribution.

DOI10.1080/00231940.2016.1199941