前古典时期中期玛雅低地景观资本的发展

Pub Date : 2022-01-01 DOI:10.1017/S0956536122000062
Kathryn Reese-Taylor, Verónica A. Vázquez López, N. Dunning, Armando Anaya Hernández, S. Montgomery, Debra S. Walker
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在本文中,我们认为景观资本是玛雅低地复杂性发展不可或缺的一部分。这些特征包括对景观的永久投资,支持物质和意识形态实践,从而增加可持续性和福祉。我们认为,这些发展源于前陶瓷/早期前古典时期土壤的增殖性改变,以及前古典中期对农业特征、大型公共工程和精选城市综合体的有意劳动力投资。在前古典时期中期,当定居的职业和公民生活建立起来时,资本的改善尤为重要。投资的时间和地点与前古典中期生活方式的其他方面密切相关,例如向定居主义的过渡、资源的获取和控制、石器生产的变化以及精英阶层的出现。我们注意到,在前古典期中期,一些最大的景观管理投资发生在中部喀斯特高地,那里的大型城市在前古典期晚期兴起。我们得出结论,在前古典时期中期,基于日常和仪式实践与物理特征的协同融合,景观资本的本体论发展起来,这为后代的弹性、可持续性和福祉提供了基础。
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THE DEVELOPMENT OF LANDESQUE CAPITAL IN THE MAYA LOWLANDS DURING THE MIDDLE PRECLASSIC
ABSTRACT In this article, we argue that landesque capital was integral to the development of complexity in the Maya Lowlands. Such features involved permanent investments in the landscape that supported material and ideological practices, resulting in increased sustainability and well-being. We contend that these developments stemmed from accretional modifications to soils in the Preceramic/Early Preclassic, as well as intentional investments of labor in agricultural features, large public works, and select civic complexes during the Middle Preclassic. Capital improvements were particularly important during the Middle Preclassic, when sedentary occupations and civic life were established. The timing and location of the investments strongly correlate with other aspects of Middle Preclassic lifeways, such as the transition to sedentism, acquisition and control of resources, changes in lithic production, and the emergence of an elite class. We note that some of the largest investments in landscape management during the Middle Preclassic occurred in the Central Karstic Uplands, where substantial cities rose in the Late Preclassic. We conclude that during the Middle Preclassic an ontology of landesque capital developed, based on the synergistic fusing of daily and ritual practices with physical features, which provided a foundation for resilience, sustainability, and well-being in subsequent generations.
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