History 570 : The Incas David Garrett Fall, 2007 Vollum 139, x7454

Requirements: • Preparation for, attendance at, and participation in conference. • Two papers: • A 5 page paper on an assigned topic, due 22 October • A 10 page paper on a topic of your devising, due 12 December

Books Available for Purchase at Bookstore (also on Library Reserves) Terence D’Altroy, The Incas (Oxford: Blackwell, 2003) Bernabé Cobo, A History of the (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1979) Bernabé Cobo, Inca Religion and Customs (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1990) Carolyn Dean, Inka Bodies and the Body of Christ (Durham: Duke, 1998)

* Online, accessible through library catalog ** On reserve *** On e-reserve 8.29 Pre-imperial Inca society D’Altroy, The Incas, 1-61 ** Bauer, Development of the Inca State, 1-36 9.04 Archaeology and what we know MEET ON TUESDAY INSTEAD OF WEDNESDAY ** Bauer, Development of the Inca State, 36-146 *** Hastorf and D’Altroy, “The Domestic Economy, Households, and Imperial Transformation” 9.12 The imperial expansion Cobo, History of the Inca Empire, 94-171 D’Altroy, The Incas, 62-108 * Covey, “Chronology Succession, and Sovereignty” 9.19 D’Altroy, The Incas, 109-140 Cobo, Inca Religion and Customs, 47-84 ** Niles, “The Provinces in the Heartland” *** Gose, “The Past is a Lower Moiety” 9.26 Inca Religion D’Altroy, The Incas, 140-76 ** McEwen and Van de Guchte, “Ancestral Time and Sacred Space in Inca State Ritual.” Cobo, Inca Religion and Customs, 1-46, 85-177, 246-252 10.3 Imperial rule D’Altroy, The Incas, 205-262 Cobo, History of the Inca Empire, 185-207, 244-56 Cobo, Inca Religion and Custom, 215-19 * Gose, “The State as a Chosen Woman” 10.10 Society and Economy D’Altroy, The Incas, 262-310 Cobo, History of the Inca Empire, 208-243 Cobo, Inca Religion and Custom, 181-245

10.17 No Class – Fall Break 10.22 First Paper Due 10.24 Conquest D’Altroy, The Incas, 311-320 Cobo, History of the Inca Empire, 172-184 * Patricia Seed, “Failing to Marvel: Atahualpa’s Encounter with the Word” ** Noble David Cook, Born to Die. 1-14 and 72-133 10.31 Cataclysm and Change *** Robert Himmerich y Valencia, “The 1536 of Cuzco: An Analysis of Inca and Spanish Warfare” * Sabine MacCormack, “Pachacuti: Miracles, Punishments, and Last Judgment: Visionary Past and Prophetic Future in Early Colonial ” American Historical Review 93:1 (1988), 960-1006 * Jeremy Mumford, “The Taki Onqoy and the Andean Nation: Sources and Interpretations” Latin American Research Review 1998 33(1) 150-65 11.7 The Colonial Order * Kathryn Burns, “Gender and the Politics of Mestizaje: The Convent of Santa Clara in Cuzco” Other readings TBA 11.14 The Renaissance Inca ** Pedro Sarmiento de Gamboa, Pages TBA ** Inca Garcilaso de la Vega, Royal Commentaries, 3-8, 30-55, 67-94, 241-67 * Peter Brading, “The Incas and the Renaissance” 11.21 No Class – Thanksgiving Break 11.28 Colonial Incas * Sabine MacCormack, “History, Historical Record and Ceremonial Action: Incas and Spaniards in Cusco” * Marie Timberlake, “The Painted Colonial Image: Andean and Jesuit Fabrication of History in Matrimonio de García de Loyola con Ñusta Beatriz” 12.5 Carolyn Dean, Inka Bodies and the Body of Christ 12.12 Final Paper Due

Reserve and Article Readings : ** Bauer, Brian. Development of the Inca State (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1992). * Brading, David. “The Incas and the Renaissance: The Royal Commentaries of Inca Garcilaso de la Vega” Journal of Latin American Studies 18:1 (May 1986), 1-23. * Burns, Kathryn. “Gender and the Politics of Mestizaje: The Convent of Santa Clara in Cusco” Hispanic American Historical Review, 78:1 (1998), 5-44. ** N. David Cook. Born to Die: Disease and New World Conquest, 1492-1650 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998). * Covey, R. Alan. “Chronology, Succession, and Sovereignty: The Politics of Inka Historiography and its Modern Interpretation” Comparative Studies in Society and History 48:1 (January 2006), 169-199. *** D’Altroy, Terence and Christine Hastorf. Empire and Domestic Economy (New York: Kluwer, 2001) *** Gose, Peter. “The Past is a Lower Moiety: Diarchy, History, and Divine Kingship in the Inka Empire” History and Anthropology 9:4 (1996) 383-414. * Gose, Peter. “The State as a Chosen Woman: Brideservice and the Feeding of Tributaries in the Inka Empire” American Anthropologist 102:1 (2000), 84-97. *** Himmerich y Valencia, Robert. “The 1536 Siege of Cusco; An Analysis of Inca and Spanish Warfare” Colonial Latin American Historical Review 7:4 (1998) 387-418 * MacCormack, Sabine. “History, Historical Record and Ceremonial Action: Incas and Spaniards in Cusco” Comparative Studies in Society and History 2001 43(2): 329-63. * MacCormack, Sabine. “Pachacuti: Miracles, Punishments, and Last Judgment: Visionary Past and Prophetic Future in Early Colonial Peru” American Historical Review 93:1 (1988), 960-1006 ** McEwen, Colin and Maarten Van de Guchte. “Ancestral Time and Sacred Space in Inca State Ritual.” 359-71 in Richard F. Townsend, ed., The Ancient Americas: Art from Sacred Landscapes (Chicago: Art Institute, 1992). * Mumford, Jeremy. “The Taki Onqoy and the Andean Nation: Sources and Interpretations” Latin American Research Review 1998 33(1) 150-65. ** Niles, Susan. “Provinces in the Heartland: Stylistic Variation and Architectural Innovation near Inca Cuzco” 145-176 in Michael A. Malpass, ed., Provincial Inca: Archaeological and Ethnohistorical Assessment of the Impact of the Inca State (Iowa City: University of Iowa Press, 1993). * Seed, Patricia. “Failing to Marvel: Atahualpa’s Encounter with the Word” Latin American Research Review 1991 26 (1): 7- 32 * Timberlake, Marie“The Painted Colonial Image: Andean and Jesuit Fabrication of History in Matrimonio de García de Loyola con Ñusta Beatriz” Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 1999 29 (3) 563-598.