Explaining Socially Determined Ceramic Distributions in the Prehistoric Plateau Southwest
- 1 October 1981
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in American Antiquity
- Vol. 46 (4) , 822-833
- https://doi.org/10.2307/280108
Abstract
We examine the process of political development in relation to selected social and economic variables in the plateau region of the American Southwest. We argue that political development was closely associated with strategies of agricultural intensification, surplus production, changes in the organization and management of labor, and expanding regional exchange. We draw supporting data from several settlement systems and attempt to demonstrate that both exotic and labor-intensive commodities were restricted to political and economic centers. We then examine the distribution of one category of these materials, ceramics, through application of the "production step" measure. Our analysis suggests that access to highly decorated ceramic items was restricted to individuals residing at the largest centers. Traditional interpretations of the political organization of plateau region prehistoric groups stress their egalitarian qualities. We suggest that such interpretations be re-examined in the light of data and arguments presented here.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Production Step Measure: An Ordinal Index of Labor Input in Ceramic ManufactureAmerican Antiquity, 1981
- Escaping the Confines of Normative Thought: A Reevaluation of Puebloan PrehistoryAmerican Antiquity, 1979
- Mortuary Practices and the Study of Prehistoric Social SystemsPublished by Elsevier ,1978
- Some Archaeological Correlates of Ranked SocietiesAmerican Antiquity, 1977
- Prehistoric Social Organization in Chaco Canyon, New Mexico: An Alternative ReconstructionKIVA, 1973
- A Synthesis of the Prehistory of the Central Little Colorado Valley, ArizonaAmerican Antiquity, 1968
- Archaeology as AnthropologyAmerican Antiquity, 1962
- Mogollon Settlement Patterns in Pine Lawn Valley, New MexicoAmerican Antiquity, 1960
- Excavations in the upper Little Colorado drainage, eastern Arizona / [by] Paul S. Martin [and] John B. Rinaldo.Published by Smithsonian Institution ,1960
- Archaeological Studies in the Petrified Forest National Monument. Fred Wendorf. With appendix by Anna O. Shepard and special sections by Kate Peck Kent and Earl H. Morris. Museum of Northern Arizona, Bull. 27, Northern Arizona Society of Science and Art, Flagstaff, 1953. x+204 pp., 96 figs. $6.00.American Antiquity, 1955