Stacie M. King
Indiana University
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Featured researches published by Stacie M. King.
Ancient Mesoamerica | 2011
Stacie M. King
Abstract Excavations at the site of Río Viejo in coastal Oaxaca, Mexico, yielded evidence of intensive cotton thread production during the Early Postclassic (a.d. 975–1220). Spindle whorls were recovered in relatively large quantities in and around houses at Río Viejo, indicating that thread production was interspersed with other household activities and residents likely produced enough thread for local use and for export. Measurements of coastal spindle whorls show that the Río Viejo thread was unique compared to other coastal and highland sites in Oaxaca and Mesoamerica beyond. I argue that this uniqueness may in part stem from the particular variety of cotton that they were spinning, but also might reflect an interregional demand for their thread. The whorl data are presented in multiple ways to compare to other sites where intensive thread production has been proposed. Here, I discuss the problems inherent in whorl calculations and make a call for more standardized recording, ideally with volumetric density measures. In the final section of the paper, I use mortuary data and other lines of evidence to re-evaluate the ethnohistorically-documented relationship between women and textile production. In coastal Oaxaca, the evidence suggests that thread production was not linked to specific gender identities in a way that is marked archaeologically. Instead, adult members of households in coastal Oaxaca materially emphasized a shared group identity over any specific gender-based identities. The production of thread was a broadly shared household-level practice that involved multiple producers, which both created and reinforced social bonds between residents and provided Early Postclassic residents with secure and comfortable access to highland goods, paving the way for the more developed thread production industry in the Late Postclassic period.
Ancient Mesoamerica | 2014
Arthur A. Joyce; Marc N. Levine; Stacie M. King; Jessica Hedgepeth Balkin; Sarah Barber
Abstract We use excavations of low-status houses to explore Postclassic political and economic transformations in the lower Río Verde Valley, Oaxaca. Following the collapse of Classic period political institutions, commoners experienced greater economic and political autonomy. Residential excavations at Río Viejo indicate that commoners took advantage of the absence of regional authority to gain greater control over surplus craft products, especially cotton thread, as well as access to social valuables and long distance trade. By the Late Postclassic period, the region was once again dominated by powerful rulers. Yet household excavations at Tututepec show that Late Postclassic commoners continued to control some surplus craft production and had access to social valuables like copper and polychrome pottery via market exchange. We argue that Late Postclassic political relations were a product of negotiations among elites and commoners that in part reflect the greater economic autonomy and political power that Early Postclassic people had acquired.
Latin American Antiquity | 2004
Arthur A. Joyce; Andrew Workinger; Byron Hamann; Peter Kroefges; Maxine Oland; Stacie M. King
Journal of Archaeological Science | 2008
Stacie M. King
Archeological Papers of the American Anthropological Association | 2010
Ron L. Adams; Stacie M. King
Archeological Papers of the American Anthropological Association | 2010
Stacie M. King
Journal of Anthropological Archaeology | 2016
Barbara L. Stark; Matthew A. Boxt; Janine Gasco; Rebecca B. González Lauck; Jessica Hedgepeth Balkin; Arthur A. Joyce; Stacie M. King; Charles L. F. Knight; Robert P. Kruger; Marc N. Levine; Richard G. Lesure; Rebecca R. Mendelsohn; Marx Navarro-Castillo; Hector Neff; Michael A. Ohnersorgen; Christopher A. Pool; L. Mark Raab; Robert M. Rosenswig; Marcie L. Venter; Barbara Voorhies; David T. Williams; Andrew Workinger
Archaeologies | 2011
Stacie M. King; Gonzalo Sánchez Santiago
The 82nd Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology | 2018
Jacklyn Rumberger; Arthur A. Joyce; Sarah Barber; Stacie M. King; Guy Hepp
The 81st Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology | 2017
Andrew Workinger; Stacie M. King