176 pages, 6 x 9
32 color, 73 b&w illustrations, 3 maps, bibliography, index
Hardcover
Release Date:20 Mar 1995
ISBN:9780813013503
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Lost Cities of the Ancient Southeast

University Press of Florida

"First-rate. . . . This book is excellent for both the general public and the general scholarly audience. . . . Lively, lucid prose."—Janet Catherine Berlo, University of Missouri, St. Louis

"Provides concise art historical analysis of works of art that have never been subjected to such analysis before. . . joining the best from old classics and the latest scholarship in the field.  It’s a huge task and O’Connor has done it well."—Amelia M. Trevelyan, Gettysburg College

 

When Columbus arrived on the shores of Hispaniola, a rich and complex civilization already existed that forms the core of American cultural history.  Exploring ancient southeastern Indian sites from the metropolis of Cahokia (near present-day St. Louis), ancient capital of the American heartland, to the island stronghold of Calos, king of the Florida Calusa, Mallory O’Connor examines the significance of these prehistoric cultures.

 Bringing together scholarship from classics in architecture, archaeology, and iconography, she discusses twenty sites of Mississippian culture, describing the religious patterns of the inhabitants and the sophisticated art works that supported their sacred practices.   She also addresses the controversial topic of repatriation of Indian artifacts and the continuing problem of archaeological "looting" of Indian sites and ceremonial centers.

 Lavishly illustrated with maps, site plans, and photographs of the ruins of ancient ceremonial centers along with sculpture, ceramics, and other artifacts, Lost Cities of the Ancient Southeast captures the timeless beauty and technical sophistication of the art and architecture of pre-Columbian America.

Mallory McCane O’Connor is director of the Santa Fe Gallery, Santa Fe Community College, in Gainesville, Florida.  She has taught art history at the University of Florida and has published articles on art history and on gender and art in Native North American Art History, American Indian Art Magazine, and  Southern Quarterly.

 

Barbara Gibbs, a Gainesville-based photographer, served as a photographic consultant for the Amazonia Research Institute, Brazil, and has photographed sacred ceremonial sites in Latin America and the American Southwest.  She has exhibited her photographs in California and Florida.

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