Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Part one Theoretical perspectives
- Part two Ideology and Power in the Present and Historical Past
- Part three Ideology and Power in Prehistory
- 5 Burials, houses, women and men in the European Neolithic
- 6 Economic and ideological change: Cyclical growth in the pre-state societies of Jutland
- 7 Ritual and prestige in the prehistory of Wessex c. 2,200–1,400 BC: A new dimension to the archaeological evidence
- 8 Ideology and the legitimation of power in the Middle Neolithic of Southern Sweden
- Part four Conclusions
- Index
8 - Ideology and the legitimation of power in the Middle Neolithic of Southern Sweden
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 March 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Part one Theoretical perspectives
- Part two Ideology and Power in the Present and Historical Past
- Part three Ideology and Power in Prehistory
- 5 Burials, houses, women and men in the European Neolithic
- 6 Economic and ideological change: Cyclical growth in the pre-state societies of Jutland
- 7 Ritual and prestige in the prehistory of Wessex c. 2,200–1,400 BC: A new dimension to the archaeological evidence
- 8 Ideology and the legitimation of power in the Middle Neolithic of Southern Sweden
- Part four Conclusions
- Index
Summary
Men make their own history, but they do not make it just as they please; they do not make it under circumstances chosen by themselves, but under circumstances directly encountered, given and transmitted from the past. The tradition of all the dead generations weighs like a nightmare on the brain of the living.
Marx, Eighteenth BrumaireThe focus of this paper is on diachronic analysis and it attempts to operationalise the theoretical perspective outlined in Chapter 1 to a substantive body of prehistoric data to provide an explanation for the change from the Funnel Neck Beaker to the Battle-Axe/Corded-Ware tradition in southern Sweden. Firstly a general theoretical position is put forward for the understanding of power strategies and modes of legitimising asymmetrical power relations in small-scale, lineage-based societies. A series of detailed archaeological analyses are discussed dealing with economic and environmental evidence, orientation relationships between sites, mortuary practices, contexts of artifact deposition, and aspects of ceramic design structure. A number of homologies are shown to link disparate aspects of the archaeological evidence and interpreted as attempts to legitimise authority in relation to both between-group and within-group power differentials. It is argued that the failure of ideological practices, involving the manipulation of material culture, to legitimate social domination and conceal social contradictions led, ultimately, to a legitimation crisis and the collapse of the social order manifested in the change from the Funnel Beaker to Battle-Axe tradition.
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- Information
- Ideology, Power and Prehistory , pp. 111 - 146Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1984
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