Orienting West Mexico: The Mesoamerican World System 200-1200 CE
Abstract
As world-systems theory came to the fore in archaeology during the 1980s and 1990s, it became evident that the analysis of pre-capitalist core/periphery relations required modifications of this theory for its further use in the discipline. As a result, the comparative approach for world-systems analysis (Chase-Dunn and Hall 1997) discerned four interaction networks that defined pre-capitalist world-systems. The appearance of the comparative approach coincided with archaeology's detour into the diverse inquiries of postmodernism, for which conceptual advances in world-system analysis went largely unnoticed in the discipline. The present study applies the nested network interaction framework of the comparative approach to examine material evidence for core/periphery relations between on the one hand two state level societies of central Mexico: Teotihuacan and Tula; and, on the other, West Mexico, one of the largest subareas of Mesoamerica. The operationalization of the nested networks as a material culture model for the Early Classic and Early Postclassic periods indicate that West Mexico was integrated into macroregional developments and change between 200-1200 CE. The present study represents one of the first comprehensive applications of the comparative approach in areal research undertaken in Mesoamerica.
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Humanistiska fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Arts
Institution
Department of Historical Studies ; Institutionen för historiska studier
Disputation
Onsdag den 7 februari klockan 13.15, Stora hörsalen (2150), Eklandagatan 86, Göteborg
Date of defence
2018-02-07
Date
2018-02-07Author
Jimenez Betts, Peter F.
Keywords
Mesoamerica, Archaeology, World-Systems theory, World-Systems analysis, Nested Networks, West Mexico, Central Mexico, Early Classic, Epiclassic, Early Postclassic
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-85245-75-5
ISSN
0282-6860
Language
eng