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Pottery Production, Mortuary Practice, and Social Complexity in the Majiayao Culture, NW China (ca. 5300-4000 BP) .

机译:中国西北地区马家窑文化中的陶器生产,Mor葬实践和社会复杂性(约5300-4000 BP)。

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摘要

The Majiayao Culture (ca. 5300--4000 BP) is famous for its stunning painted pottery vessels. First discovered in the 1920s in northwestern China, these Neolithic painted pottery vessels have become one of the most popular icons used to depict the rich material culture of ancient China. Today, many museums throughout the world hold Majiayao painted pottery vessels in their collections. We know much about the pottery, but research on the associated Majiayao Culture has been limited to cultural histories that emphasize chronology and trait-list classification. These approaches present the Majiayao Culture as static and simplify the social and economic complexity of the people who composed this society. Although scholars commonly assume that Majiayao painted pottery vessels were made by specialized craftspeople, the social and economic processes behind the production of these vessels have long been overlooked.;Materials discussed in this dissertation include firsthand attribute and physicochemical analyses of hundreds of ceramic vessels and samples selected from multiple sites in Gansu, Qinghai, and Sichuan provinces. These data are supplemented with settlement pattern and mortuary analyses of thousands of published sites and burials. By synthesizing these data, this study illustrates a positive correlation between regional density of settlement distribution, intensification of pottery production, and degree of social inequality in each phase during the Majiayao Cultural period. Rather than showing a simple linear process of social complexity, however, there are distinct regional variations in each phase and significant regional fluctuations over time. Results of this study demonstrate economic and social patterns related to Majiayao ceramics were far more complex than we have previously thought.;Specifically, intensive ceramic production among these Neolithic agricultural communities was primarily driven by the increasing demand to offer large quantities of painted pottery vessels at funerals. These Neolithic communities fulfilled the increasing demand for painted pottery vessels in mortuary practices by sacrificing vessel quality to promote production efficiency. When the demand for vessel quantity reached its peak, no products were made with the skill and care comparable to the most high-quality vessels dated to earlier phases. Further, the great demand also encouraged the development of inter-regional exchange involving painted pottery vessels. Certain production groups in the core area of site distribution in each phase were able to make relatively high quality vessels and successfully increased their output to best meet the needs of both internal and external consumers. Therefore, I argue that the distribution and consumption of these craft goods was not limited by kin organization. I emphasized these vessels were marketable objects---commodities. The way these craft goods moved from the hands of potters to the consumers was associated with complicated social and economic interaction/exchange, about which we still have limited understanding.;The development of social hierarchy in this region is indicated by the disparity of painted vessels unearthed from graves. The preference for painted storage jars may relate to the development of agriculture in this region. These vessels seem to be used as a symbol of wealth. However, these craft goods were generally available for most social members of different ranks. Exchange of goods also led to an exchange of cultural and social experiences. Diverse social values might have been delivered and structured through the circulation of Majiayao painted pottery vessels among the living and between the living and the dead. Patterns identified in this study shed new insights into conceptualizing the dynamic social and economic relationships among Neolithic village-scale communities.
机译:马家窑文化(约5300--4000 BP)以其精美的彩绘陶器而闻名。最早于1920年代在中国西北地区发现,这些新石器时代彩绘陶器已成为用来描绘古代中国丰富物质文化的最受欢迎图标之一。如今,全世界许多博物馆都在其藏品中收藏了马加窑彩绘陶器。我们对陶器了解很多,但是有关马加窑文化的研究仅限于强调年代和特征列表分类的文化历史。这些方法将马加窑文化呈现为静态,并简化了组成该社会的人们的社会和经济复杂性。尽管学者们普遍认为,马家窑彩绘陶器是由专门的工匠制作的,但长期以来却忽略了这些陶器生产的社会和经济过程。本论文讨论的材料包括对数百种陶瓷器皿和样品的第一手属性和理化分析。从甘肃,青海和四川省的多个站点中选择。这些数据还辅以对数千种已发表遗址和墓葬的定居方式和葬分析。通过综合这些数据,本研究说明了马加窑文化时期每个阶段的定居点分布区域密度,陶器生产集约化和社会不平等程度之间存在正相关关系。但是,与其表现出简单的线性的社会复杂性线性过程,还不如说每个阶段都有明显的区域差异,并且随着时间的推移会出现明显的区域波动。这项研究的结果表明,与马加窑陶瓷相关的经济和社会模式比我们以前想象的要复杂得多。具体来说,这些新石器时代农业社区的集约化陶瓷生产主要是由对提供大量彩绘陶器的需求不断增长驱动的。葬礼。这些新石器时代的社区通过牺牲器皿质量来提高生产效率,从而满足了房实践中对彩绘陶器的日益增长的需求。当对船只数量的需求达到顶峰时,没有任何产品可以用与早期阶段最优质的船只相媲美的技能和精心制造。此外,巨大的需求也鼓励了涉及彩绘陶器的区域间交流的发展。每个阶段站点分布的核心区域中的某些生产组能够制造相对高质量的船只,并成功地增加了产量,以最好地满足内部和外部消费者的需求。因此,我认为这些手工艺品的分配和消费不受亲属组织的限制。我强调这些船只是可销售的商品。这些手工艺品从陶工手中转移到消费者手中的方式与复杂的社会和经济互动/交换有关,对此我们仍然缺乏了解。;该地区社会等级制度的发展由彩绘船只的差异所表明。从坟墓中发掘出来的。对带漆的储物罐的偏爱可能与该地区农业的发展有关。这些船只似乎被用作财富的象征。但是,这些手工艺品通常可用于大多数不同级别的社会成员。货物交换也导致了文化和社会经验的交换。通过在生者之间以及生者与死者之间流通马加窑彩绘陶器,可以传递和构建各种社会价值。这项研究确定的模式为概念化新石器时代乡村规模的社区之间动态的社会和经济关系提供了新的见解。

著录项

  • 作者

    Hung, Ling-yu.;

  • 作者单位

    Washington University in St. Louis.;

  • 授予单位 Washington University in St. Louis.;
  • 学科 Anthropology Archaeology.;Asian Studies.;Art History.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2011
  • 页码 403 p.
  • 总页数 403
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

  • 入库时间 2022-08-17 11:44:17

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