Dimensions of inequality. Comparing the North Atlantic and the US Southwest

Orri Vésteinsson, Michelle Hegmon, Jette Arneborg, Glen Rice, Will G. Russell

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Abstrakt

Analysis of three different realms of inequality in two pairs of small-scale pre-industrial societies in two very
different and culturally unconnected regions – Hohokam and Mimbres in the US Southwest and Greenland and
Iceland in the North Atlantic – suggests that inequality can be successfully used as a yardstick to compare
societies in the past. The study finds that there were significant inequalities in these small-scale farming societies
– often described in previous studies as “egalitarian” – but that proxies for economic inequality like access to
productive resources and to exotic goods do not fully reflect the range and nature of these inequalities. Access to
ritual space is found to be a more sensitive measure of actual inequalities as experienced by members of these
societies
OriginalsprogEngelsk
TidsskriftJournal of Anthropological Archaeology
Vol/bind54 (2019)
Udgave nummerJune
Sider (fra-til)172-191
Antal sider20
ISSN0278-4165
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2019

Emneord

  • Inequality
  • Productive resources
  • Exotic goods
  • Ritual space
  • Norse Greenland
  • Iceland
  • Hohokam
  • Mimbres

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