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This book gives an overview of different factors involved in the
emergence and change in early urban societies in fourth-millennium
Mesopotamia and Egypt; pre-Shang China; Classie horizon Central
Mexico, Oaxaca, and the Maya Area; and Middle Horizon societies in
the Andean Region. These factors range from centralized storage and
redistributive econo mies, agromanagerial models, mercantile
network control, confliet and conquest, conversion of military
commanders into administrators, political power through monumental
cosmic reproduction, and elite power through ideological change. It
discusses specific archaeological data useful in theoretieal
construction. In the Introduction, a discussion of different
developmental processes of urban societies is made. The Eastern
Anatolian example emphasizes the role played by interregional
exchange networks linking the Mesopotamian plains with the
Syro-Anatolian regions. The emergence of an elite is related with
the control of the movement of craft goods and raw materials, more
than with the appropriation of subsistence goods. The Chinese
example stresses the importance of conflict provoked by demographie
pressures on resources. The Mesoamerican cases relate to vast urban
developments and manu facturing centers, ideological importance of
monumental planning, and changing behavior of elites. The Andean
cases are related either to the transformation of theocratie
leadership into military administrators oe to the agricultural
intensification model."
This book gives an overview of different factors involved in the
emergence and change in early urban societies in fourth-millennium
Mesopotamia and Egypt; pre-Shang China; Classie horizon Central
Mexico, Oaxaca, and the Maya Area; and Middle Horizon societies in
the Andean Region. These factors range from centralized storage and
redistributive econo mies, agromanagerial models, mercantile
network control, confliet and conquest, conversion of military
commanders into administrators, political power through monumental
cosmic reproduction, and elite power through ideological change. It
discusses specific archaeological data useful in theoretieal
construction. In the Introduction, a discussion of different
developmental processes of urban societies is made. The Eastern
Anatolian example emphasizes the role played by interregional
exchange networks linking the Mesopotamian plains with the
Syro-Anatolian regions. The emergence of an elite is related with
the control of the movement of craft goods and raw materials, more
than with the appropriation of subsistence goods. The Chinese
example stresses the importance of conflict provoked by demographie
pressures on resources. The Mesoamerican cases relate to vast urban
developments and manu facturing centers, ideological importance of
monumental planning, and changing behavior of elites. The Andean
cases are related either to the transformation of theocratie
leadership into military administrators oe to the agricultural
intensification model.
Drawing on Kent Flannery's forty years of cross-cultural research
in the area, the contributors to this collection reflect the
current diversity of contemporary approaches to the study of
cultural evolutionary processes. Collectively the volume expresses
the richness of the issues being investigated by comparative
theorists interested in long-term change, as well as the wide
variety of data, approaches, and ideas that researchers are
employing to examine these questions.
Drawing on Kent Flannery's forty years of cross-cultural research
in the area, the contributors to this collection reflect the
current diversity of contemporary approaches to the study of
cultural evolutionary processes. Collectively the volume expresses
the richness of the issues being investigated by comparative
theorists interested in long-term change, as well as the wide
variety of data, approaches, and ideas that researchers are
employing to examine these questions.
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