Beyond identifying elites: Feasting as a means to understand early Middle Formative society on the Pacific Coast of Mexico |
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Authors: | Robert M. Rosenswig |
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Affiliation: | Department of Anthropology, University at Albany—SUNY, 1400 Washington Ave., Albany, NY 12222, USA |
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Abstract: | Feasts provide a public forum where social statuses can be affirmed or challenged among pre-state societies. Documenting feasting behavior thus provides insight into the construction of prehistoric political power. This paper presents expected material patterns of feasting by focusing on intra-site variability in food preparation, presentation, and consumption. Expectations are evaluated by comparing ceramic, ground stone, obsidian, and faunal data recovered from Conchas phase (900–800 BCE) elite and village midden deposits at Cuauhtémoc in the Soconusco region of southern Mexico. I argue that elite feasting at Cuauhtémoc created political cohesion between elite and non-elite segments of society during the Conchas phase as a new polity emerged that was more socially stratified and politically hierarchical than anything previously known in the region. |
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Keywords: | Social complexity Mesoamerica Domestic activity Political strategies Feasting Olmec Emergence of agriculture |
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