Craft and the Kingly Ideal
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Mary W. Helms
About this book
In ancient Mediterranean cultures, diamonds were thought to endow their owners with invincibility. In contemporary United States culture, a foreign-made luxury car is believed to give its owner status and prestige. Where do these beliefs come from?
In this study of craft production and long-distance trade in traditional, nonindustrial societies, Mary W. Helms explores the power attributed to objects that either are produced by skilled artisans and/or come from "afar." She argues that fine artisanship and long-distance trade, both of which are more available to powerful elites than to ordinary people, are means of creating or acquiring tangible objects that embody intangible powers and energies from the cosmological realms of gods, ancestors, or heroes. Through the objects, these qualities become available to human society and confer honor and power on their possessors.
Helms’ novel approach equates trade with artistry and emphasizes acquisition rather than distribution. She rejects the classic Western separation between economics and aesthetics and offers a new paradigm for understanding traditional societies that will be of interest to all anthropologists and archaeologists.
Author / Editor information
Mary W. Helms is Professor of Anthropology at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro.
Topics
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Frontmatter
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Contents
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Preface
xi -
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1 Introduction to the Problem
1 - PART I SKILLED CRAFTING
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2 What Skilled Crafting Means
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3 Skilled Artisans in Time and Space
28 -
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4 Qualities of Skilled Artisans
52 -
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5 Skilled Crafting and Political Authority
69 - PART II ACQUISITION
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6 Exchange, Trade, and Acquisition
91 -
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7 Acquisition in Time and Space
109 -
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8 Qualities of Acquisition
128 -
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9 Naturally Endowed Goods and Skillfully Crafted Goods
146 -
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10 Acquisition and Political Authority
160 - PART III CENTERS AND ORIGINS
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11 Superordinate Centers
173 -
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12 Acquisitional Polities
192 -
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13 Conclusions
210 -
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Notes
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References
247 -
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Index
279