Power Relations and the Adoption of Foreign Material Culture: A Different Perspective from First-Millennium BCE Nubia

Kathryn E. Howley
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Questions of power relations have long been central to archaeological study of culture contact, with colonial relationships exciting particular interest. However, current frameworks do not account for the adoption of foreign material culture by cultures that are politically stronger than those from which they adopt. The wide variety of Egyptian material culture forms on display at first millennium BCE royal sites in Nubia such as the cemeteries of el-Kurru and Nuri is one such example of non-colonial cultural interaction which is not adequately explained by the postcolonial theories currently popular. This paper argues that the Kushite royal adoption of Egyptian forms was not based in concerns of ethnic identity or subaltern resistance, but instead reflected native Kushite state structures and value systems. It argues that theories of state structure and economy, including prestige goods economies, are more useful for understanding the nature of culture contact in non-colonial situations.
权力关系与外来物质文化的接受:从公元前一千年前的努比亚看
长期以来,权力关系问题一直是文化接触考古研究的核心,殖民地关系尤其令人感兴趣。然而,目前的框架并没有考虑到政治上比它们所接受的文化更强大的文化对外国物质文化的采用。在努比亚公元前一千年的皇家遗址,如el-Kurru和Nuri的墓地,展示了各种各样的埃及物质文化形式,这是非殖民文化互动的一个例子,目前流行的后殖民理论并不能充分解释这一点。本文认为,库施王室对埃及形式的采用并非基于种族认同或下层抵抗的考虑,而是反映了库施本土的国家结构和价值体系。它认为,国家结构和经济理论,包括名牌商品经济,对于理解非殖民情况下文化接触的本质更有用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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