Topics in Latin American and Caribbean Studies (391-0-23)
Topic
Ancient Cities of the Americas
Instructors
Roberto Rosado Ramirez
1810 Hinman Ave.
Meeting Info
University Library 3370: Mon, Wed 3:30PM - 4:50PM
Overview of class
Course title: Ancient Cities of the Americas
"When colonial empires invaded the Americas in the 16th century, Europeans marveled at the Indigenous cities distributed across the continent. This course examines the ancient cities of the Americas: their origins, their configurations, their operations, and their representations. It considers how archaeologists define urbanism among ancient societies, and why not every human settlement qualifies as a city. We will begin this course by studying the earliest experiments with settlement nucleation in the world. Then, we will review scholarship on ancient cities in North, Central, and South America. Topics will include urban configurations, everyday life in ancient cities, how inequality was built into urban space, and providing for city dwellers. We will discuss the characteristics of ancient Indigenous cities such as Cahokia in Illinois, Tenochtitlan in Mexico, Tikal in Guatemala, and Machu Pichu in Peru, among others. This class will provide you a general understanding of the ancient civilizations of the Americas through the characteristics of their major cities."
Teaching Method
Seminar
Evaluation Method
Attendance, Participation, Reading Reactions, Final Project
Class Materials (Required)
All of the readings for this course will come from articles and book chapters provided online through Canvas.