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This volume challenges traditional narratives on power, moving away from elite-centered models and focusing instead on the archaeology of commoners.
List of contents
Preface Carole L. Crumley; 1. Power from Below in the Archaeological Record: Trends and Trajectories T. L. Thurston and Manuel Fernández-Götz; 2. Fragmenting Trypillian Mega-Sites: A Bottom-Up Approach Bisserka Gaydarska; 3. Structure and Agency. On Bronze Age Tell Settlement in the Carpathian Basin Tobias L. Kienlin; 4. Power Requires Others - 'Institutional Realities' and the Significance of Individual Power in Late Prehistoric Europe David Fontijn; 5. 'And Make Some Other Man Our King': Labile Elite Power Structures in Early Iron Age Europe Bettina Arnold; 6. Societies against the Chief? Re-Examining the Value of 'Heterarchy' as a Concept for Studying European Iron Age Societies Tom Moore and David González-Álvarez; 7. Peasants, Agricultural Intensification, and Collective Action in Premodern States Lane F. Fargher and Richard E. Blanton; 8. The Spread of Scribal Literacy in Han China: All along the Watchtowers Christopher J. Foster; 9. Confronting Leviathan: Some Remarks on Resistance to the State in Pre-Capitalist Societies. The Case of Early Medieval Northern Iberia Carlos Tejerizo-García and Álvaro Carvajal Castro; 10. The Emergence of Monte Albán: A Social Innovation that Lasted a Millennium Gary M. Feinman, Richard E. Blanton and Linda M. Nicholas; 11. Dispersing Power: The Contentious, Egalitarian Politics of the Salado Phenomenon in the Hohokam Region of the US Southwest Lewis Borck and Jeffery J. Clark; 12. The Perplexing Heterarchical Complexity of New Guinea Fisher-Forager Polities at Contact Paul Roscoe; 13. Restoring Disorder: Thoughts on the Past and Future of a Politically and Socially Conscious Archaeology T. L. Thurston and Manuel Fernández-Götz.
About the author
T. L. Thurston is Professor of Anthropology at SUNY Buffalo. His main interest lies in the interface between people, places, and governance in late prehistoric and historical Europe, often in comparison with other regions, cultures, and times. He finds that questions linking large-scale sociopolitical conditions with the life-course experiences of individuals and groups are best addressed with mixed research methods that unify quantitative and qualitative approaches.Manuel Fernández-Götz is Reader and Head of the Department of Archaeology at the University of Edinburgh. He has published widely on Iron Age and Roman societies in Europe, the archaeology of identities, and conflict archaeology. Among his main publications are the edited volumes Eurasia at the Dawn of History: Urbanization and Social Change (2016) and Conflict Archaeology: Materialities of Collective Violence from Prehistory to Late Antiquity (2018).