Hohokam Craft Economies and the Materialization of Power |
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Authors: | James M. Bayman |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Anthropology, University of Hawaii, 2424 Maile Way, Social Sciences Building 346, Honolulu, Hawaii, 96822-2223 |
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Abstract: | The Prestige Goods Economy Model invoked by archaeologists to explain the development of power in middle-range societies generally fails to discriminate the varied roles of social valuables. This study illustrates a multi-faceted approach for identifying the symbolic utility of craft economies among the Hohokam in North America. Contextual analyses of marine shell artifacts disclose their functions as material symbols of group membership and identity, ritual performance paraphernalia, instruments of power, and insignia of office. These valuables were imbued with ideological meanings that legitimized the emergence of corporate modes of power from individualized networks. Applications of the Prestige Goods Economy Model in other world regions would also be enriched by more detailed examination of the meanings of social valuables. |
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Keywords: | craft economy prestige goods power archaeology |
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