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Home |Changes [Dec 27, 2007]
Is "City-State" use...Smith (2003) nicely points out the need for a polity to have a spatial component. So too does this paper. As such, I will focus on the Hittite landscapes of central Anatolia, drawing on a rich array of material from a polity capital (Hattusha), acts of inscribing the landscape (rock reliefs, large-scale landscape alteration), and the intersection between these landscapes as places of political and social control and sites of daily practice. The Hittites example is intriguing because it involves an expanding and contracting polity that left evidence behind of its engagement with both the landscapes and people encountered. My own experiences from this past summer will be drawn on to elucidate much of this material.
Preliminary Bibliography:
Bourdieu, P.
Ehringhaus, Horst. 2005. Gotter, Herrscher, Inschriften: die Felsreliefs der hethitischen Grossreichszeit in der Turkei. Mainz am Rhein. Philipp von Zabern.
Smith, Adam T. 2003. The Political Landscape: constellations of Authority in Early Complex Polities. Berkeley. University of California Press.
Yoffee, N. 2005. Myths of the Archaic State: evolution of the earliest cities, states, and civilizations. Cambridge. Cambridge University Press.