“Peeples’s contributions to understanding the connectivity of the greater Southwest cannot be overstated, and the sheer quantity of data he compiles… is to be applauded…. His work is the culmination of several decades of Southwestern scholarship and is likely to become a foundational study in the region.”—American Antiquity
“Connected communities is a well-written and significant contribution to the field of Southwestern studies. Archaeologists have long been captivated with largescale settlement dynamics, but Peeples offers a novel way to think about the intersections of identities and networks and how these shaped the histories of entire regions in the past.”—Antiquity
“It is a must read for those with interests in southwestern prehistory, interaction and identity formation, social boundaries, formalist and model-based approaches to archaeological analysis, multi-scalar approaches to the study of human communities, and/or comparative social science research.”—Choice
“Peeples’ innovative research has broad implications for how archaeologists study identity, ethnicity, culture areas, and collective action, and his approach could be applied to any part of the world and to any time period.”—Deborah Huntley, Current World Archaeology
“Peeples, one of the brightest emerging scholars in archaeology, examines decades of high-quality archaeological research in the Cibola region through a new and original use of theories of identity, social networks, and social transformation, demonstrating the added value of comparative, synthetic analysis.”—Judith A. Habicht Mauche, University of California, Santa Cruz
“Network thinking is one of the most exciting recent developments in archaeology, and nowhere has it been more productively applied than in the U.S. Southwest. Here Peeples continues this emergent tradition with a most impressive book-length treatment that every archaeologist interested in social networks will want to read.”—Carl Knappett, University of Toronto
“A major contribution to Southwest archaeology, theories of identity, and network analysis. Peeples uses multiple ways of connecting people in the past, including artifacts and architecture, to show the layered nature of relationships.”—Barbara J. Mills, University of Arizona