Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- List of contributors
- Preface
- PART I INTRODUCTION
- PART II CHIEFDOMS
- PART III STATES
- PART IV DISCUSSIONS
- 16 Factional competition and historical materialism
- 17 Conclusions: moietal opposition, segmentation, and factionalism in New World political arenas
- Bibliography
- Index
17 - Conclusions: moietal opposition, segmentation, and factionalism in New World political arenas
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- List of contributors
- Preface
- PART I INTRODUCTION
- PART II CHIEFDOMS
- PART III STATES
- PART IV DISCUSSIONS
- 16 Factional competition and historical materialism
- 17 Conclusions: moietal opposition, segmentation, and factionalism in New World political arenas
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
In aboriginal American societies, factions competed for power, prestige, authority, and material benefits. A counterpositioning of structurally similar corporate groups, often in pairs, generated factional competition. This collection provides case studies on factional competition in a variety of environmental settings and on the methods for discerning factionalism across a gamut of social fields.
Theoretical approaches to conflict and change
A steady theoretical stream has attempted to explain exogenous cause and culture effect (adaptation) in the evolution of simple to more complex societies. In the positivist tradition, with Newton drawing analogy to the clock, a principal machine of his day, eighteenth- and nineteenth-century social theoreticians sought the forces that set the three-fold (savagery, barbarism, civilization) “evolutionary clock” in motion (e.g. climate for Montesquieu). During the 1920s to 1950s, a “dynamist approach” focused on the basic “tensions inherent in any society” (Balandier 1970:17–18), but conflict was said to improve social functioning. Newton's smoothly running clock was transposed synchronically; groups strove teleologically to maintain the well-oiled social machine for the greater social good.
For cultural ecologists, environmental stress was the catalyst to evolution. In essence, Newton's smoothly functioning system was recast as trophic exchanges and competition. But “systems models cannot explain chronic problems generated by the very operation of the system as constituted, such as civil wars, succession disputes or tax evasion” (Gailey and Patterson 1987:5) other than as Malthusian competition for material resources – i.e., biological reductionism. Darwinian-like competition removed the dysfunctional social parts while the evolutionary clock ticked uniformly upward in the spiral of cultural evolution.
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- Factional Competition and Political Development in the New World , pp. 199 - 206Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1994
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