TY - BOOK AU - Crown,Patricia L. AU - Mills,Barbara J. ED - Project Muse. TI - Ceramic Production in the American Southwest / SN - 9780816548804 PY - 1995/// CY - Tucson PB - University of Arizona Press KW - Materiaux ceramiques KW - États-Unis (sud-ouest) KW - ram KW - Keramiek KW - gtt KW - Archeologische vondsten KW - Aufsatzsammlung KW - gnd KW - Keramik KW - Pueblo pottery KW - Themes, motives KW - fast KW - Ethnoarchaeology KW - Ceramic materials KW - Analysis KW - Antiquities KW - 15.32 prehistoric and protohistoric archaeology KW - bcl KW - Ethnoarcheologie KW - États-Unis (Nouveau Sud-Ouest) KW - Analyse KW - Southwest, New KW - Classification KW - Indianer KW - swd KW - USA KW - Südweststaaten KW - New Southwest KW - Antiquites KW - Electronic books. KW - local N1 - Ceramic production in the American Southwest : an introduction; Barbara J. Mills and Patricia L. Crown --; Production for local consumption and exchange : comparisons of early red and white ware ceramics in the San Juan region; Michelle Hegmon, Winston Hurst, and James R. Allison --; Changing specialization of white ware manufacture in the northern San Juan region; C. Dean Wilson and Eric Blinman --; Temporal patterns without temporal variation : the paradox of Hohokan red ware ceramics; David R. Abbott and Mary-Ellen Walsh-Anduze --; Role of population movement and technology transfer in the manufacture of prehistoric southwestern ceramics; María Nieves Zedeño --; Production of the Slado polychromes in the American Southwest; Patricia L. Crown --; Changing patterns of pottery manufacture and trade in the northern Rio Grande region; Judith A. Habicht-Mauche --; Organization of protohistoric Zuni ceramic production; Barbara J. Mills --; Problems in analysis of standardization and specialization in pottery; Barbara L. Stark --; Paradigms and pottery : the analysis of production and exchange in the American Southwest; Stephen Plog --; Creativity and craft : household pottery traditions in the Southwest; Melissa B. Hagstrum; Open Access N2 - Southwestern ceramics have always been admired for their variety and aesthetic beauty. Although ceramics are most often used for placing the peoples who produced them in time, they can also provide important clues to past economic organization. This volume covers nearly one thousand years of southwestern prehistory and history, focusing on ceramic production in a number of environmental and economic contexts. It brings together the best of current research to illustrate the variation in the organization of production evident in this single geographic area UR - https://muse.jhu.edu/book/101326/ ER -