13 City, State, and Market: Lessons from Mesoamerica

Edward Swenson
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Abstract

In evaluating the contributions to this issue, this chapter questions the predictable co-occurrence of cities with markets and states, a long-held position in western social theory. However, an extreme relativism is also flawed, and the projection of anti-capitalist fantasies on past, other peoples have equally distorted interpretations of the archaeological record and blinded researchers to the reality of market economies in societies including the Maya. Ultimately, the power of the comparative method entails more than the identification of commonalities between different market traditions. It can also serve to illuminate how market economics were embedded in distinct cultural, ideological, and material worlds. Calculating self-interest, supply-and-demand, and impersonal exchange do not operate according to a single behavioral logic but are shaped by ideologies of identity and desire specific to distinct regimes of value. Therefore, attention to the cultural and spatial context of economic transactions—in the original spirit of Polanyi—remains indispensable to interpreting how markets may have shaped historically particular constructions of personhood, community, inequality, place, and the ontological status of commodities. In the end, I argue that archaeologists also need to investigate the political affordances of markets as specific urban places and not simply as epiphenomena to a priori political or economic institutions.

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城市、国家和市场:来自中美洲的经验教训
在评估对这一问题的贡献时,本章质疑城市与市场和国家的可预测共存,这是西方社会理论长期持有的立场。然而,极端的相对主义也是有缺陷的,对过去的反资本主义幻想的投射,其他民族同样扭曲了对考古记录的解释,使研究人员对包括玛雅社会在内的市场经济的现实视而不见。最终,比较方法的力量不仅仅是识别不同市场传统之间的共性。它还可以用来阐明市场经济是如何嵌入不同的文化、意识形态和物质世界的。计算自身利益、供求关系和非个人交换并不按照单一的行为逻辑运作,而是受到身份意识形态和特定于不同价值制度的欲望的影响。因此,关注经济交易的文化和空间背景——在波兰尼的原始精神中——对于解释市场如何塑造历史上特定的人格、社区、不平等、地方和商品的本体论地位的结构仍然是不可或缺的。最后,我认为考古学家还需要将市场作为特定的城市场所,而不是简单地将其作为先验的政治或经济制度的附带现象来研究。
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