Description
Book SynopsisThe central theme of this volume is the political economy of early state societies: the ways in which the income of the central government of such systems was collected and spent. The work contains descriptive as well as narrative and commemorative essays. Contributions present data on early states as diverse as the Interlacustrine states of East Africa, the Sudanic states of West Africa, prehistoric Cahokia in the Mississippi Valley, Aztec Mexico, the Classical Maya, eighteenth-century Nepal, and Polynesian, Tahitian, and Mayan case studies. At the theoretical end of the spectrum, the book offers a general discussion of the concept of political economy; modes of production in antiquity, and the editors themselves offer an overview of early state organizational forms. With the data of the contributions to this volume, such theoretical viewpoints are evaluated. The conclusion is that inherited approaches fall far short of explaining the political economies of early states. The editors o
Table of ContentsIntroduction 1. The ABCs of Political Economy 2. The Segmentary State: From the Imaginary to the Material Means of Production 3. The Political Economy of the Interlacustrine States in East Africa 4. Paradise Regained: Myth and Reality in the Political Economy of the Early State 5. Wolof Economy and Political Organization: The West African Coast in the Mid-Fifteenth Century 6. Early State Economics: Cahokia, Capital of the Ramey State 7. Tribute and Commerce in Imperial Cities: The Case of Xaltocan, Mexico 8. Gift and Tribute: Relations of Dependency in Aztec Mexico 9. Divide and Pool: Early State Economics and the Classic Maya 10. State and Community: Changing Relations of Production after the Unification of Nepal 11. The Political Economy of an Early State: Hawaii and Samoa Compared 12. State and Economy in Polynesia