The Archaeology of Politics and Power: Where, When and Why the First States Formed

by Charles Keith Maisels

Paperback, 2010

Status

Available

Call number

CC72.4 .M357

Publication

Oxbow Books (2010), Edition: 1st edition, 488 pages

Description

Archaeology is not just about the past, but the present and future too. Much of our present condition and future prospects are inevitably bound up with what states do and what they fail to do.To understand the inner-workings and motivations of states one must understand how and why they came into existence in the first place. This book describes how states formed in Egypt and Mesopotamia, China and the Andes, and also how the Indus Civilization functioned without a state.This work spans law, ideology, politics, economics, and psychology, the ancient world and modern history, in order to show how power is obtained, sustained and deployed, and in whose interests. Grounded in archaeological data, it examines human nature, morality, violence and governance, issues of special importance to everyone, but in particular to students of politics, anthropology, psychology and sociology, as well as archaeology.… (more)

Media reviews

The formation of early states is a topic that has attracted the attention of generations of anthropologists, and these researchers have in many cases developed significant new theory that enriched the historical social sciences. The Archaeology of Politics and Power, however, is not likely to be
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regarded as an equally useful theory source.
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Language

Original language

English

Physical description

488 p.; 6.75 inches

ISBN

1842173529 / 9781842173527

Barcode

34662000812450
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