Signs of Power

The Rise of Cultural Complexity in the Southeast

Jon L Gibson editor Philip J Carr editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:The University of Alabama Press

Published:11th May '04

Should be back in stock very soon

Signs of Power cover

By focusing on the first instances of mound building, pottery making, fancy polished stone and bone, as well as specialized chipped stone, artifacts, and their widespread exchange, this book explores the sources of power and organization among Archaic societies. It investigates the origins of these technologies and their effects on long-term (evolutionary) and short-term (historical) change. The characteristics of first origins in social complexity belong to 5,000- to 6,000-year-old Archaic groups who inhabited the southeastern United States. In Signs of Power, regional specialists identify the conditions, causes, and consequences that define organization and social complexity in societies. Often termed ""big mound power,"" these considerations include the role of demography, kinship, and ecology in sociocultural change; the meaning of geometry and design in sacred groupings; the degree of advancement in stone tool technologies; and differentials in shell ring sizes that reflect social inequality.

This volume aptly Illustrates the very complex nature of Archaic societies that constructed the earliest earthworks in the New World and sets their activities in the broader context of their times. - John Kelly, Washington University at St. Louis

ISBN: 9780817313913

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 798g

420 pages