Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- INTRODUCTION
- 1 THE EVOLUTION OF A FACTOID
- 2 DIMENSIONS OF POWER IN THE EARLIEST STATES
- 3 THE MEANING OF CITIES IN THE EARLIEST STATES AND CIVILIZATIONS
- 4 WHEN COMPLEXITY WAS SIMPLIFIED
- 5 IDENTITY AND AGENCY IN EARLY STATES: CASE STUDIES
- 6 THE COLLAPSE OF ANCIENT STATES AND CIVILIZATIONS
- 7 SOCIAL EVOLUTIONARY TRAJECTORIES
- 8 NEW RULES OF THE GAME
- 9 ALTERED STATES: THE EVOLUTION OF HISTORY
- Acknowledgments
- References
- Index
INTRODUCTION
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- INTRODUCTION
- 1 THE EVOLUTION OF A FACTOID
- 2 DIMENSIONS OF POWER IN THE EARLIEST STATES
- 3 THE MEANING OF CITIES IN THE EARLIEST STATES AND CIVILIZATIONS
- 4 WHEN COMPLEXITY WAS SIMPLIFIED
- 5 IDENTITY AND AGENCY IN EARLY STATES: CASE STUDIES
- 6 THE COLLAPSE OF ANCIENT STATES AND CIVILIZATIONS
- 7 SOCIAL EVOLUTIONARY TRAJECTORIES
- 8 NEW RULES OF THE GAME
- 9 ALTERED STATES: THE EVOLUTION OF HISTORY
- Acknowledgments
- References
- Index
Summary
The evolution of the earliest cities, states, and civilizations is an enormous topic and writing about it is made no easier by my discomfort with the term “evolution” itself. Although I criticize “neo-evolutionary” theory – that is, the attempt to create categories of human progress, which in anthropology stems from the nineteenth-century work of Edward Tylor and Lewis Henry Morgan and which was revivified in the mid-twentieth century by Leslie White and Julian Steward and others – I do not reject the term evolution or social evolution.
Economically stratified and socially differentiated societies developed all over the world from societies that were little stratified and relatively undifferentiated; large and densely populated cities developed from small habitation sites and villages; social classes developed from societies that were structured by kin-relations which functioned as frameworks for production, and so forth. These changes must be explained, and archaeologists have been doing the job with remarkable success for more than a century, with the pace of research quickening in the last decades. As I discuss throughout this book, it doesn't much matter what we call things, as long as we explain clearly what we mean, and as long as our categories further research, rather than force data into analytical blocks that are self-fulfilling prophecies.
This book is about the earliest states, particularly the constellations of power in them, and also about their evolution, that is, where varieties of power came from.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Myths of the Archaic StateEvolution of the Earliest Cities, States, and Civilizations, pp. 1 - 3Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2005