Studying the Development of Complex Society: Mesopotamia in the Late Fifth and Fourth Millennia BC |
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Authors: | Mitchell S. Rothman |
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Affiliation: | (1) Social Science Division, Widener University, Chester, Pennsylvania, 19013-5792 |
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Abstract: | Inca specialist D'Altroy (2001, Uruk Mesopatamia and Its Neighbours: Cross-Cultural Interactions in the Era of State Formation, School of American Research, Santa Fe, NM, p. 445) has written, Uruk Mesopotamia has stood as the model for the study of the rise of the state for several decades. Work on this problem of the origin of complexity has remained one of the foci of scholarly research even these several decades after the completion of many of the classic and key studies of Uruk culture and its neighbors in adjoining areas. At the same time, the questions asked, the size and richness of the empirical record, and the interpretations of various scholars have undergone significant change. These changes parallel scholarly trends in studies of similar phenomena in other areas of the world. This article reviews key questions that are currently being asked about societal complexity with a primary focus on the cultures and societies of late fifth and fourth millennia BC Mesopotamia. In doing so, new perspectives and interpretations on perhaps the earliest complex societies are synthesized and assessed. |
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Keywords: | Greater Mesopotamia social evolutionary theory Uruk / late chalcolithic period |
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