Mississippian Smoking Ritual in the Southern Appalachian Region
eBook - PDF

Mississippian Smoking Ritual in the Southern Appalachian Region

  1. 289 pages
  2. English
  3. PDF
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - PDF

Mississippian Smoking Ritual in the Southern Appalachian Region

About this book

North American Indians cultivated tobacco beginning in prehistory, often through great effort and for multiple reasons. Especially valued for its narcotic effects, however, tobacco was assigned sacred status and became a necessary component for any event with cultural or religious significance. As such, ritualistic tobacco use joined cult usage of other plants as Native American societies evolved throughout the Mississippian time period.

In Mississippian Smoking Ritual in the Southern Appalachian Region, Dennis B. Blanton surveys smoking pipes found at archaeological sites throughout southern Appalachia and neighboring areas to present a holistic picture of Native American smoking rituals in the region. While tobacco could also be eaten or infused into tea, native peoples traditionally dried the leaves and smoked them in increasingly ornate pipes. The ritual importance of tobacco translated into a similar status for smoking pipes. Mississippian pipe traditions varied throughout the region but in accordance with distinctive cultural patterns. Blanton’s research ties pipe usage and pipe-smoking traditions to particular pipe forms, and sometimes to specific sites, and in doing so, he further informs our knowledge of the complexities of Mississippian societies and their myriad ceremonial rituals.

Mississippian Smoking Ritual in the Southern Appalachian Region is an especially useful text for understanding ritual behavior and its patterns of change over time. The historical trajectory of tobacco begins with adherence to a longstanding smoking tradition but evolves into a complex ceremonial practice with equally complex forms of tobacco pipes. This regional study demonstrates how smoking rituals changed as broader cultural shifts redefined the Mississippian Era, bringing archaeologists closer to answering the elusive macro question of why rituals evolved within Native American cultures.

Dennis B. Blanton is an assistant professor of anthropology at James Madison University in Virginia. He is coauthor, with Wes Patterson, Jeffrey B. Glover, and Frankie Snow, of Point of Contact: Archaeological Evaluation of a Potential De Soto Encampment in Georgia. He is also coeditor, with Robert A. DeVillar, of Archaeological Encounters with Georgia’s Spanish Period, 1526–1700: New Findings and Perspectives, and, with Julia A. King, of Indian and European Contact in Context: The Middle Atlantic Region.

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Yes, you can access Mississippian Smoking Ritual in the Southern Appalachian Region by Dennis B. Blanton in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Social Sciences & North American History. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Table of contents

  1. Contents
  2. Acknowledgments
  3. Introduction
  4. 1. Tobacco and Historical Documentation of Its use in the Southeast
  5. 2. Archaeological Context of South Appalachian Mississippian Smoking Ritual
  6. 3. Theorizing the Role of Religious Ritual
  7. 4. Temporal and Geographical Dimensions of Smoking Pipe Styles
  8. 5. Symbolism Embedded in Smoking Pipe Styles
  9. 6. The Evolution of A Ritual
  10. Appendix A. Collections Examined
  11. Appendix B. Refrenced Archaeological Sites
  12. Appendix C. Descriptions of Smoking Pipe Type Categories and Variants
  13. Appendix D. Summaty of Metric Attributes
  14. Refrences Cited
  15. Index