|
Product Description
Orderly Anarchy delivers a provocative and innovative reexamination of sociopolitical evolution among Native American groups in California, a region known for its wealth of prehistoric languages, populations, and cultural adaptations. Scholars have tended to emphasize the development of social complexity and inequality to explain this diversity. Robert L. Bettinger argues instead that "orderly anarchy," the emergence of small, autonomous groups, provided a crucial strategy in social organization. Drawing on ethnographic and archaeological data and evolutionary, economic, and anthropological theory, he shows that these small groups devised diverse solutions to environmental, technological, and social obstacles to the intensified use of resources. This book revises our understanding of how California became the most densely populated landscape in aboriginal North America.
Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought
- Landscapes and Social Transformations on the Northwest Coast: Colonial Encounters in the Fraser Valley (Archaeology of Indigenous-Colonial Interactions in the Americas)
- The Evolution of Human Co-operation: Ritual and Social Complexity in Stateless Societies
- California Prehistory: Colonization, Culture, and Complexity
- Inigo of Rancho Posolmi: The Life and Times of a Mission Indian (Formerly Ballena Press Anthropological Papers, No. 47)
- Ten Thousand Years of Inequality: The Archaeology of Wealth Differences (Amerind Studies in Archaeology)
- Handbook of Evolutionary Research in Archaeology
- The Lives of Stone Tools: Crafting the Status, Skill, and Identity of Flintknappers
- Schools and Styles of Anthropological Theory
- Technology as Human Social Tradition: Cultural Transmission among Hunter-Gatherers (Origins of Human Behavior and Culture)
- The Ohlone Way: Indian Life in the San Francisco-Monterey Bay Area
*If this is not the "Orderly Anarchy: Sociopolitical Evolution in Aboriginal California (Origins of Human Behavior and Cu" product you were looking for, you can check the other results by clicking this link. Details were last updated on Nov 3, 2024 20:56 +08.