{"title":"我们跑,叮叮,不,我们跑","authors":"S. Rathbone","doi":"10.1017/S1380203819000175","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"best interest through skilful manipulation of social circumstances and material resources. But another answer is that in many cases they didn’t submit; aggrandizers were curtailed by overt and subversive resistance to their ends. This point brings to the forefront one issue not fully addressed by Borake – the relationship between the theory of anarchism and the concept of egalitarianism. They are not the same thing – anarchism, with its emphasis on autonomy and decentralization, staves off centralization at a political level and maintains autonomy at a local level, but it does not necessarily maintain egalitarianism in all social contexts. Coast Salish societies of the Pacific Northwest Coast of North America had significant inequalities, yet remained politically decentralized and maintained a high degree of autonomy in decision making (Grier 2017). In short, they traded off equality for autonomy. The empirical component of Borake’s study offers a fresh look at monumental constructions in Iron Age and medieval Scandinavia (monumental in the sense of Grier and Schwadron 2017). Most critical is the notion that we should see in many of the collective, expansive and iterative construction works she considers not the heavy hand of centralized power, but the product of decentralized collective action. How such enduring works can serve to reify decentralized politics and local autonomy has been quite underappreciated. Collective action in the service of autonomy might seem incongruous, but only from starting assumptions that preclude it (see Trigger 1990). We do get inklings of similar connections and practices from the archaeology of hunter-gatherer-fishers in the south-eastern US (e.g. Randall 2015; Wallis 2008), and similar to Borake’s study of Danevirke, there is a long arc to the construction process, often covering millennia, that reiterates, reinforces and at times remakes the social order over time. Similar ideas are also emerging from the Northwest Coast of North America (Grier, Angelbeck and McLay 2017). The archaeological question then becomes, how do we confidently recognize the products of anarchic organization in the archaeological record? Does a slow additive emergence and repeated investment in material thing sites directly imply networks, justified authority, autonomy and decentralization? That is Borake’s assertion in using the term ‘thing sites’ to describe such places – that the materiality and sociality of these places are embedded in a recursive and persistent relationship through time, reflecting expressions of anarchism principles. This is something we should be evaluating in archaeological contexts around the world. So I see strength in Borake’s application of anarchism as both a theoretical and an analytical framework. Ultimately this approach can provide a way to rethink aspects of the material record of collective action and its relation to a core set of principles that were undoubtedly operating in many social contexts in the past. In this sense, it offers a bottom-up theoretical perspective that can allow us to – in Borake’s words – ‘gain a more complex and nuanced understanding of how societies operate’ (p. 62; see also Furholt et al. 2019).","PeriodicalId":45009,"journal":{"name":"Archaeological Dialogues","volume":"26 1","pages":"75 - 78"},"PeriodicalIF":1.4000,"publicationDate":"2019-12-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1017/S1380203819000175","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"We run tingz, tingz nah run we\",\"authors\":\"S. Rathbone\",\"doi\":\"10.1017/S1380203819000175\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"best interest through skilful manipulation of social circumstances and material resources. But another answer is that in many cases they didn’t submit; aggrandizers were curtailed by overt and subversive resistance to their ends. This point brings to the forefront one issue not fully addressed by Borake – the relationship between the theory of anarchism and the concept of egalitarianism. They are not the same thing – anarchism, with its emphasis on autonomy and decentralization, staves off centralization at a political level and maintains autonomy at a local level, but it does not necessarily maintain egalitarianism in all social contexts. Coast Salish societies of the Pacific Northwest Coast of North America had significant inequalities, yet remained politically decentralized and maintained a high degree of autonomy in decision making (Grier 2017). In short, they traded off equality for autonomy. The empirical component of Borake’s study offers a fresh look at monumental constructions in Iron Age and medieval Scandinavia (monumental in the sense of Grier and Schwadron 2017). Most critical is the notion that we should see in many of the collective, expansive and iterative construction works she considers not the heavy hand of centralized power, but the product of decentralized collective action. How such enduring works can serve to reify decentralized politics and local autonomy has been quite underappreciated. Collective action in the service of autonomy might seem incongruous, but only from starting assumptions that preclude it (see Trigger 1990). We do get inklings of similar connections and practices from the archaeology of hunter-gatherer-fishers in the south-eastern US (e.g. Randall 2015; Wallis 2008), and similar to Borake’s study of Danevirke, there is a long arc to the construction process, often covering millennia, that reiterates, reinforces and at times remakes the social order over time. Similar ideas are also emerging from the Northwest Coast of North America (Grier, Angelbeck and McLay 2017). 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引用次数: 0
摘要
通过巧妙地操纵社会环境和物质资源获得最大利益。但另一个答案是,在很多情况下,他们没有提交;夸大者被公然的和颠覆性的抵抗所削弱。这一点引出了一个波拉克没有完全解决的问题——无政府主义理论与平等主义概念之间的关系。它们不是一回事——无政府主义强调自治和权力下放,在政治层面上避免中央集权,在地方层面上保持自治,但它不一定在所有社会背景下都保持平等主义。北美太平洋西北海岸的海岸萨利什社会存在显著的不平等,但在政治上仍然分散,并在决策中保持高度自治(Grier 2017)。简而言之,他们用平等换取了自治。Borake研究的实证部分为铁器时代和中世纪斯堪的纳维亚半岛的纪念性建筑提供了新的视角(Grier和Schwadron 2017意义上的纪念性)。最关键的是,我们应该在许多集体的、广泛的、反复的建筑作品中看到这样一个概念,她认为这不是中央集权的高压手段,而是分散的集体行动的产物。这些经久不衰的作品是如何将权力下放的政治和地方自治具体化的,一直没有得到足够的重视。为自治服务的集体行动可能看起来不协调,但这只是从一开始就排除了它的假设(参见触发器1990)。我们确实从美国东南部的狩猎-采集-渔民的考古中得到了类似的联系和实践的暗示(例如Randall 2015;Wallis 2008),与Borake对Danevirke的研究类似,建筑过程有一个很长的弧线,通常覆盖数千年,随着时间的推移,它重申,加强,有时重塑社会秩序。北美西北海岸也出现了类似的想法(Grier, Angelbeck和McLay 2017)。那么考古学的问题就变成了,我们如何自信地在考古记录中识别无政府组织的产物?对实物网站的缓慢增加和重复投资是否直接意味着网络、合理的权威、自治和去中心化?这就是Borake在使用术语“物点”来描述这些地方时的主张——这些地方的物质性和社会性嵌入了一种递归的、持久的关系,反映了无政府主义原则的表达。这是我们应该在世界各地的考古背景下评估的东西。因此,我看到了波拉克将无政府主义应用于理论和分析框架的力量。最终,这种方法可以提供一种方法来重新思考集体行动的物质记录的各个方面,以及它与一套核心原则的关系,这些原则无疑在过去的许多社会环境中起作用。从这个意义上说,它提供了一个自下而上的理论视角,可以让我们-用Borake的话来说-“对社会如何运作获得更复杂和细致的理解”(第62页;另见Furholt et al. 2019)。
best interest through skilful manipulation of social circumstances and material resources. But another answer is that in many cases they didn’t submit; aggrandizers were curtailed by overt and subversive resistance to their ends. This point brings to the forefront one issue not fully addressed by Borake – the relationship between the theory of anarchism and the concept of egalitarianism. They are not the same thing – anarchism, with its emphasis on autonomy and decentralization, staves off centralization at a political level and maintains autonomy at a local level, but it does not necessarily maintain egalitarianism in all social contexts. Coast Salish societies of the Pacific Northwest Coast of North America had significant inequalities, yet remained politically decentralized and maintained a high degree of autonomy in decision making (Grier 2017). In short, they traded off equality for autonomy. The empirical component of Borake’s study offers a fresh look at monumental constructions in Iron Age and medieval Scandinavia (monumental in the sense of Grier and Schwadron 2017). Most critical is the notion that we should see in many of the collective, expansive and iterative construction works she considers not the heavy hand of centralized power, but the product of decentralized collective action. How such enduring works can serve to reify decentralized politics and local autonomy has been quite underappreciated. Collective action in the service of autonomy might seem incongruous, but only from starting assumptions that preclude it (see Trigger 1990). We do get inklings of similar connections and practices from the archaeology of hunter-gatherer-fishers in the south-eastern US (e.g. Randall 2015; Wallis 2008), and similar to Borake’s study of Danevirke, there is a long arc to the construction process, often covering millennia, that reiterates, reinforces and at times remakes the social order over time. Similar ideas are also emerging from the Northwest Coast of North America (Grier, Angelbeck and McLay 2017). The archaeological question then becomes, how do we confidently recognize the products of anarchic organization in the archaeological record? Does a slow additive emergence and repeated investment in material thing sites directly imply networks, justified authority, autonomy and decentralization? That is Borake’s assertion in using the term ‘thing sites’ to describe such places – that the materiality and sociality of these places are embedded in a recursive and persistent relationship through time, reflecting expressions of anarchism principles. This is something we should be evaluating in archaeological contexts around the world. So I see strength in Borake’s application of anarchism as both a theoretical and an analytical framework. Ultimately this approach can provide a way to rethink aspects of the material record of collective action and its relation to a core set of principles that were undoubtedly operating in many social contexts in the past. In this sense, it offers a bottom-up theoretical perspective that can allow us to – in Borake’s words – ‘gain a more complex and nuanced understanding of how societies operate’ (p. 62; see also Furholt et al. 2019).
期刊介绍:
Archaeology is undergoing rapid changes in terms of its conceptual framework and its place in contemporary society. In this challenging intellectual climate, Archaeological Dialogues has become one of the leading journals for debating innovative issues in archaeology. Firmly rooted in European archaeology, it now serves the international academic community for discussing the theories and practices of archaeology today. True to its name, debate takes a central place in Archaeological Dialogues.