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The creation of value and prestige in the Aegean Late Bronze Age

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 January 2017

Sofia Voutsaki*
Affiliation:
Sidgwick Avenue, Cambridge CB3 9DA, Great Britain
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Abstract

The main questions addressed in this paper are these: How can we conceptualise power? How can we identify power relations in the archaeological record? How can we explain the emergence of asymmetrical power relations?

These questions will be approached by discussing the creation of value and prestige in primitive societies, with particular emphasis on the practice of conspicuous consumption. I shall argue that an object's value is created not only through labour at the moment of production, but also during its circulation within gift exchange networks, and through its consumption (destruction, deposition) in ostentatious ceremonies. While both gift exchange and conspicuous consumption are central strategies for the creation of value and prestige, I suggest that there is a crucial difference between them: conspicuous consumption brings about the abolition of the reciprocal relationship on which gift exchange is based. The initiation (and indeed the institutionalisation) of conspicuous consumption is therefore an important strategy in creating, rather than simply expressing or legitimating asymmetrical relationships.

The theoretical discussion will be applied to a specific historical problem: the transformation of the largely egalitarian kin-based Middle Bronze Age societies of the southern Greek mainland into the hierarchical Mycenaean (i.e. Late Bronze Age) palatial system. I shall argue that conspicuous consumption in the mortuary sphere was not simply a symptom, but a crucial element of the deep structural transformation that swept the southern mainland at the transition to the Late Bronze Age.

Les questions principales qui sont traitées dans cet article sont les suivantes: Comment peut-on conceptualiser le pouvoir? Comment peut-on identifier les relations de pouvoir dans le domaine archéologique? Comment peut-on expliquer l'émergence de relations de pouvoir asymétriques?

Ces questions seront traitées en examinant la création de la valeur et du prestige dans les sociétés primitives, on insistera plus particulièrement sur la pratique de la consommation ostentatoire. On montrera que la valeur d'un objet est créée non seulement par le travail produit au moment de sa production, mais aussi pendant qu'il circule à l'intérieur de réseaux d'échange de cadeaux, au travers de sa consommation (destruction, déposition) pendant des cérémonies ostentatoires. Bien que l'échange de cadeaux et la consommation ostentatoire soient deux stratégies centrales dans la création de la valeur et du prestige, je voudrais souligner qu'il existe une difference cruciale entre elles: la consommation ostentatoire entraîne l'abolition des relations réciproques sur lesquelles est basé l'échange de cadeaux. L'introduction (et méme l'institutionnalisation) de la consommation ostentatoire constitue par conséquent une stratégie importante dans la création, plutôt que dans la simple expression ou légitimation des relations asymétriques.

La discussion théorique est appliquée à un problème historique spécifique: la transformation des sociétés basées sur la famille, en général égalitaires, dans le sud de la Grèce continentale, au milieu de la période de l'Age du Bronze, en un système hiérarchique mycénien grandiose (c-à-d. la fin de l'Age de bronze). Je montrerais que, dans la sphère mortuaire, la consommation ostentatoire n'était pas simplement un symptôme mais un élément crucial de la profonde transformation qui s'est répandue dans tout le sud de la Grèce continentale pendant la période de transition qui mena à la fin de l'Age de bronze.

Die Hauptfragen, die in diesem Aufsatz angesprochen werden, sind folgende: was können wir unter ‘Macht’ verstehen? Wie können wir Machtbeziehungen im archäologischen Material identifizieren? Wie können wir das Aufkommen asymmetrischer Machtverhältnisse erklären?

Ich nähere mich diesen Fragen durch eine Diskussion der Schaffung von Wert und Prestige in primitiven Gesellschaften, unter besonderer Berücksichtigung der Praktik des Prestigekonsums (conspicuous consumption). Ich argumentiere, daβ der Wert eines Objektes nicht nur durch Arbeit im Moment seiner Produktion geschaffen wird, sondern auch durch seinen Umlauf in Geschenkeaustausch-Beziehungen sowie durch seinen Verbrauch (Zerstörung Deponierung) in pompösen Zeremonien. Sowohl Geschenkeaustausch als auch Prestigekonsum sind wichtige Strategien für die Schaffung von Wert und Prestige, doch gibt es einen entscheidenen Unterschied zwischen beiden: Prestigekonsum bringt die Beendung der reziproken Beziehung mit sich, auf der Geschenkeaustausch beruht. Die Einführung (und vor allem Institutionalisierung) von Prestigekonsum ist deshalb eine wichtige Strategie bei der Schaffung asymmetrischer Beziehungen – und nicht bloβ ihr Ausdruck oder ihre Legitimierung.

Die theoretische Diskussion wird an einem speziellen historischen Problem zur Anwendung gebracht: die Umformung der gröβtenteils egalitären, verwandtschaftsorientierten Gesellschaften der mittleren Bronzezeit des südgriechischen Festlandes in das hierarchische Palastsystem der mykenischen (d.h. spätbronzezeitlichen) Zeit. Ich argumentiere, daβ Prestigekonsum im Bereich des Totenkultes nicht nur schlicht ein Symptom, sondern ein entscheidendes Element des tiefreichenden Strukturwandels war, der am Übergang zur Spätbronzezeit durch das südliche Festland fegte.

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Articles
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Copyright © European Association of Archaeologists 

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