Political Landscapes of Capital Cities
University Press of Colorado; August 2016
Eulogio Guzman
Distinguished Senior Lecturer
School of the Museum of Fine Arts at Tufts
CHAT Faculty Fellow, 2008-2009
School of the Museum of Fine Arts at Tufts
CHAT Faculty Fellow, 2008-2009
Political Landscapes of Capital Cities investigates the processes of transformation of the natural landscape into the culturally constructed and ideologically defined political environments of capital cities. In this spatially inclusive, socially dynamic interpretation, an interdisciplinary group of authors including archaeologists, anthropologists, and art historians uses the methodology put forth in Adam T. Smith’s The Political Landscape: Constellations of Authority in Early Complex Polities to expose the intimate associations between human-made environments and the natural landscape that accommodate the sociopolitical needs of governmental authority.