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Archaeology is one of our most powerful sources of new information
about the past, about the lives of our ancient and not-so-ancient
ancestors. The contributors to Women in Antiquity consider the
theoretical problems involved in discerning what the archaeological
evidence tells us about gender roles in antiquity. The book
includes chapters on the history of gender research, historical
texts, mortuary analysis, household remains, hierarchy, and
ethnoarchaeology, with each chapter teasing out the inherent
difficulty in interpreting ancient evidence as well as the promise
of new understanding. Women in Antiquity offers a fresh, accessible
account of how we might grasp the ways in which sexual roles and
identities shaped the past.
Archaeology is one of our most powerful sources of new information
about the past, about the lives of our ancient and not-so-ancient
ancestors. The contributors to Women in Antiquity consider the
theoretical problems involved in discerning what the archaeological
evidence tells us about gender roles in antiquity. The book
includes chapters on the history of gender research, historical
texts, mortuary analysis, household remains, hierarchy, and
ethnoarchaeology, with each chapter teasing out the inherent
difficulty in interpreting ancient evidence as well as the promise
of new understanding. Women in Antiquity offers a fresh, accessible
account of how we might grasp the ways in which sexual roles and
identities shaped the past.
This book, a comparative study of specialized production in
prehistoric societies, examines both adaptionist and political
approaches to specialization and exchange using a worldwide
perspective. What forms of specialization and exchange promote
social stratification, political integration and institutional
specialization? Can increases in specialization always be linked to
improved subsistence strategies or are they more closely related to
the efforts of political elites to strengthen coalitions and
establish institutions of control? Are valuables as important as
subsistence goods in the developmental process? These and other
questions are examined in the contexts of ten prehistoric
societies, ranging from the incipient complexity of Mississippian
chiefdoms through to the more complex systems of West Africa,
Hawaii and Bronze Age Europe, to the agrarian states of
Mesopotamia, Mesoamerica, Peru and Yamato Japan. Each society is
the subject of a separate study by a scholar whose own research has
provided new insights into the interplay of specialization,
exchange and social complexity in the region studied.
Factionalism is an important force of social transformation, and
this volume examines how factional competition in the kinship and
political structures in ancient New World societies led to the
development of chiefdoms, states and empires. The case studies,
from a range of New World societies, represent all levels of
non-egalitarian societies and a wide variety of ecological settings
in the New World. They document the effects of factionalism on the
structure of particular polities: for example, how it might have
led to the growth of social inequality, or to changing patterns of
chiefly authority, or to state formation and expansion, or
institutional specialisation. The work is a creative and
substantial contribution to our understanding of the political
dynamics in early state society, and will interest archaeologists,
anthropologists, political scientists and historians.
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