Introduction
Part of the heart of anarchy is, dare to go against the grain of the conventional ways of thinking about our realities. Anarchists have always gone against the grain, and that's been a place of hope.
bell hooks (Reference hooks2011)Scholarship concerning the origins of agriculture, cities and ‘complex’ societies is in flux. Decades of slow and painstaking historical, archaeological and anthropological research is yielding a more complicated, less linear and less uniform picture of the developmental trajectories of ancient cultures globally (for a recent overview, see Graeber & Wengrow Reference Graeber and Wengrow2021). These ‘alternative’ narratives about the past are a much needed factual corrective to a set of historical myths that have had outsized and wholly deleterious effects on the modern imaginary about social structure, power, progress and future possibilities (Black Trowel Collective et al. Reference Azorin and Blackmore2024).
Tales of the inevitable and linear pathway from ‘savagery’ to ‘civilization’ were formalized during the nineteenth century (e.g. Morgan Reference Morgan1877). They were often deployed to justify and naturalize the conjoined European capitalist and colonialist projects that created ongoing patterns of global inequality. Rebranded as grand narratives about the origins of agriculture and the rise of civilizations, or deep histories of human attainment, these stories projected patterns of social life that existed during the last 200 years or less into the deep past, usually rationalized using assumptions about ‘common sense’ or ‘human nature’. These narratives universalized eurocentric ontologies and colonialist logics (e.g. Dunnell Reference Dunnell1982). A series of popular books have informed the public that, from the study of the deep past, we can be sure that Eurasians were destined (by such apparently immutable facts of nature as the distribution of infectious diseases, access to minerals, and physical geography) to dominate the rest of the world (Diamond Reference Diamond1997) where people were so unsophisticated that they misused their natural resources to the point their (inferior) civilizations collapsed (Diamond Reference Diamond2005). Further, such an arrangement is said to represent a positive development of human progress built on self-interested rationalism (Harari Reference Harari2014). This is, not to put too fine a point on it, anachronistic, propagandistic hogwash: a shampoo to cleanse the colonial pig.
Most archaeologists today would likely argue that the discipline has moved on from its colonial roots, and its scientific knowledge base sits on an assumed ‘right side of history’. As a rule, practitioners in our discipline believe, or at least say, progressive things about climate change, women's rights, systemic racism and Indigenous issues. We sip lattes in the morning, and comfort ourselves with craft beers or a cup of tea in the evenings, secure in the knowledge that the arc of history bends towards justice and that, if we put smart and good people into positions of authority, they will solve the difficult problems for us. We fly to self-congratulatory symposia around the world to celebrate the latest discoveries or toast the completion of an influential career. Too many of us see our work as ‘objective’ or ‘apolitical’, factual and scientific accountings of what happened in the past that broker no reimagining of presents or futures (Black Trowel Collective et al. Reference Azorin and Blackmore2024). This complacency obscures a deep-seated conservatism that does a disservice to past, present and future (cf. Orser Reference Orser2011).
The origin myths that archaeologists believe they have left behind regularly transform and evolve, with new language repackaging stale ideas. One example is the wrapping of colonialist narratives of the origins of civilization or ‘progress’ in a more neutral-sounding language of ‘scientific’ cultural universals, for example a dubious cognitive ‘revolution’ supposedly correlated with humanity's arrival in Europe (Mellars Reference Mellars, Runciman and Maynard1996). This claim has subsequently been made even more dubious by clear evidence that human behavioural ‘complexity’ was more geographically widespread at an earlier date than previously understood by eurocentric researchers (e.g. Aubert et al. Reference Aubert, Setiawan and Oktaviana2018; Clarkson et al. Reference Clarkson, Jacobs and Marwick2017; Martinón-Torres et al. Reference Martinón-Torres, d'Errico and Santos2021).
The latest zombie narrative to rise up and run rampant in archaeological models is hiding behind the seemingly innocuous concept of ‘inequality’. Power-flows in the present are manifestly unequal and often linked with patterns Western sensibilities have deemed ‘civilized’, so we look to the past to determine how this situation arose and to describe familiar disparities in ancient societies. And yet, far from offering liberatory narratives that challenge our contemporary status quo, an archaeology of inequality limits the field because it causes us to ask blinkered questions whose answers lead to only a few possible results (Orser Reference Orser2011). In this formulation, inequality in its contemporary form is retrojected into ancient societies, and consequently becomes inexorable and unavoidable. Cyclical and teleological modes of argumentation framed around evolutionary logic position it, like farming, states, or urbanism, as an inevitable developmental stage in the human past (Fried Reference Fried1967; Johnson & Earle Reference Johnson and Earle2000). In an archaeology of inequality, the language and concepts of contemporary political economy—in short, capitalism, colonialism and their patterns of social relations—are projected inappropriately into a uniform past. Which is a shame, because a much more interesting archaeology exists to be built out of the radical archive of alternative human social arrangements that survived and flourished in the past (see Estes Reference Estes2019; Gelderloos Reference Gelderloos2010; Graeber & Wengrow Reference Graeber and Wengrow2021; Jennings & Berquist Reference Jennings and Berquist2022; Mbah & Igariwey Reference Mbah and Igariwey1997) and the present (e.g. Acebo Reference Acebo, Panich and Gonzalez2021; Knapp et al. Reference Knapp, Flach and Ayboga2016).
Our proposal: For the past to disrupt the inequality of our present world, we must reorient towards archaeologies of equality.
Focusing on societies of equals does not mean essentializing, romanticizing, or primitiviszing past peoples. Nor does it mean ignoring unequal societies in the past or present. Rather, it requires us to develop critical understandings of lived realities that spanned radically equal as well as radically unequal experiences. It also requires acknowledging the difficulty and complexity of maintaining orderly social spaces in the absence of arbitrary or unjustified rulers, states, priests, or other institutional forms of entrenched hierarchy (see Black Trowel Collective 2016; Clastres Reference Clastres1989). We acknowledge long traditions of radical anthropological thought that often existed within the same nineteenth- and twentieth-century anthropology that produced the origin myths described above (Graeber Reference Graeber2004, 16–18), as well as the rich legacies of anarchist intellectualism that developed in parallel from outside academia (e.g. Kropotkin Reference Kropotkin1902; Parsons Reference Parsons2004). As anarchist archaeologists (see Black Trowel Collective 2016; Borck & Sanger Reference Borck and Sanger2017; Flexner & Gonzalez-Tennant Reference Flexner and Gonzalez-Tennant2019), we seek to integrate the best parts of both traditions in theory and praxis.
We are, of course, accustomed to hearing that an anarchist approach to understanding the past is biased, naive, subjective, or romantic. We ask: what could be more biased than the use of metrics that apply capitalist values to assess social patterns in pre-capitalist worlds (Basri & Lawrence Reference Basri and Lawrence2020; Kohler & Smith Reference Kohler and Smith2018)? What could be more naïve than an archaeology that reproduces an internalized capitalist realism (Fisher Reference Fisher2009) over and over again? What could be more romantic than assuming the current forms of inequality and ‘order’ are natural and inevitable outcomes of evolution, or even the better version of ourselves, rather than just one contingent possibility among many (see Gould Reference Gould1989)?
We propose a revolution that takes us from a resigned obsession with inequality to a narrative of the past that celebrates the articulation, perseverance, resilience and maintenance of forms of equality. Our archaeology explores the fluorescence of many forms of social order in the past to prefigure alternative trajectories for the present and future. Our archaeology does not valorise hierarchies as success stories, but explores their destructive nature, and raises up the status of the societies that resisted the pull towards inequality and the stories of those who actively fought against emperors and kings. Our anarchist archaeology is an archaeology of equality because we recognize that more egalitarian pasts are where we find the potential for a more equitable and inclusive future for all. Most of these are knowable only through oral histories and the archaeological record because of how textual histories are encoded and preserved (Scott Reference Scott2009, 32–6).
To build a better future, we plant our feet in the unruly past and push.
Against inequality
Your heart is a muscle the size of your fist. Keep loving. Keep fighting.
Quote from a hand-carved print by Dalia Shevin created as a reaction to the WTO protests
We reject out of hand the just-so stories of progress, complexity, inequality and selfishness that fill the lectures of most introductory archaeology courses and the chapters of most popular archaeology textbooks (to give just one example of many: Renfrew & Bahn Reference Renfrew and Bahn2016, 179–86). They offer a mythic narrative that human beings, because of their nature, went from wandering bands of equals, to tribes in which rivals earned rank and titles, to chiefdoms in which inherited power became entrenched, and ultimately states and empires which represent the pinnacle of both hierarchical order and human achievement (Fig. 1).
This myth persists in research that not only normalizes inequality, but makes its discovery inevitable. Some would argue that neo-evolutionism in archaeology has already been criticized and even rejected (e.g. Frieman Reference Frieman2021). However, recent years have seen attempts to model past inequalities quantitatively through, for example, the calculation of Gini coefficients for a diversity of past societies (see Kohler & Smith Reference Kohler and Smith2018). The Gini coefficient is a ratio that indicates levels of inequality by equating them with levels of wealth. In archaeological case studies, this often means assuming larger structures indicate increased household wealth and then comparing structures of different sizes, as if all past people and all modern people shared equivalent concepts of the value of domestic space (Basri & Lawrence Reference Basri and Lawrence2020). Other researchers claim to see hierarchy deep in the Pleistocene based on behavioural-ecological models of early human society (Singh & Glowacki Reference Singh and Glowacki2022). This approach assumes an evolutionary structure of behaviour in which fitness is measured at the level of the individual whose own selfishness and ability to thrive in a given social and ecological environment contributes to his (always his) success (Boone & Smith Reference Boone and Smith1998). It imagines a world of disconnected, self-aggrandizing, rational actors of the sort who have only ever existed in economics textbooks (Sahlins Reference Sahlins2013) and justifies contemporary social values and psychological traits by positing their evolutionary fitness since the deep past (Bamforth Reference Bamforth2002).
We say: this myth fails along a number of axes.
It disrespects many living Indigenous people, travellers, and egalitarian collectives and societies around the world, erasing them and their social conformations from history. It finds its origins in colonial narratives of eurocentric domination, designed to prop up hegemony rather than accurately reflect past reality. It fails to account for the complex diversity of the archaeological record, making it a woefully inadequate interpretative framework. It creates an overly linear (eurocentric and anachronistic) model of historic development by drawing a parsimonious line from Mesopotamia, to Egypt, through Greece and Rome, to the ‘great’ nineteenth-century empires of Europe, the so-called Ex Oriente Lux (Fig. 2). This, then, enforces a historic imaginary that allows us to take the present global order as a pre-ordained outcome on the basis of some ‘primary’ phenomenon (say, geography, per Diamond Reference Diamond1997), while placing other cultures, particularly those of western Asia, as ones that have lost their way to ‘progress’. It reproduces an insidiously ideological Christian narrative that says people, by our fallen nature, will always compete, take advantage of, and lord over each other given the opportunity, resorting to violence to do so when needed (see Graeber Reference Graeber2004, 88–92).
In reality, humans are interdependent, altruistic and deeply irrational social creatures who end up unrealistically constrained and mischaracterized by these sorts of a priori assumptions. Moreover, rationalizing and universalizing current ways of life (or, more accurately, a narrow range of practices and outlooks espoused by a non-representative sample of the contemporary world) by identifying them as evolutionarily more or less fit, is both deeply ignorant of the mechanisms of evolution and laughably teleological (McKinnon Reference McKinnon2005). Instead, we champion an archaeology that sees a lacework of possibilities emerging, transforming, interweaving and disappearing. And disappearance is key: if we cannot envision the end of a society, or at least its radical transformation, we cannot envision the end of our own or the creation of a better future for anyone. Archaeologists should know better, considering how many ‘eternal’ cities, ‘great’ rulers and ‘universal’ empires now lie in the dust.
Let us imagine our own dust, and something better growing in it.
The anarchist reorientation
The past has given us too many bad answers for us not to see that the mistakes were in the questions themselves.
The Invisible Committee (2009)Feminist archaeologists (e.g. Battle-Baptiste Reference Battle-Baptiste2011; Crumley Reference Crumley, Patterson and Gailey1987; Frieman Reference Frieman2021), Indigenous archaeologists (e.g. Atalay Reference Atalay2012; Kawelu Reference Kawelu2015; Montgomery Reference Montgomery, Crellin, Cipolla, Montgomery, Harris and Moore2020), queer archaeologists (Rutecki & Blackmore Reference Rutecki and Blackmore2016; Voss Reference Voss2008; Weismantel Reference Weismantel, Stryker and Aizura2013) and many other radical archaeologists of various stripes (Dunnavant Reference Dunnavant2021; Flewellen et al. Reference Flewellen, Dunnavant and Odewale2021; Kiddey Reference Kiddey2017; Morgan Reference Morgan2019; Zorzin Reference Zorzin2021) have left a trail of breadcrumbs for the rest of us to follow in creating an archaeology of equality. Here, we incorporate the wider world of anarchist thought—scholarly and popular, academic, and activist—to outline why an archaeology of equality is critical both to realign understandings of the past and to create narratives that challenge the contemporary order and imagine different futures.
Since its emergence as a social and political philosophy, critics have equated anarchism with the inevitable state of chaos that would result in the absence of established rulers. These Hobbesian nightmares bear little resemblance to genuine anarchist thought. Anarchism is not a monolithic perspective tied to a central authority or tenet (e.g. Milstein Reference Milstein2010; Samudzi & Anderson Reference Samudzi and Anderson2018). Its possibilities have been articulated by an incredible multitude of sometimes harmonizing, sometimes dissonant voices. In this plurality of experiences and voices lifted up by anarchists from around the world and all walks of life, there are core aspects that are shared and can be described as the fundamentals of anarchism: direct action; mutual aid; self-organization; and equality (see Black Trowel Collective n.d.).
Anarchism first and foremost is a creative force, one that seeks to create a better future, one based on its core principles of collective care, equity, and freedom.
This article does not aim to provide an overview, manual, or how-to list to apply anarchist thought in archaeological research, as there are many existing treatments of this (e.g. Angelbeck & Grier Reference Angelbeck and Grier2012; Black Trowel Collective 2016; Borck & Sanger Reference Borck and Sanger2017; Flexner & Gonzalez-Tennant Reference Flexner and Gonzalez-Tennant2019; Lerma Guijarro Reference Lerma Guijarro2017; Morgan Reference Morgan2015). Instead, we introduce the specific concern that anarchists have with anthropological and archaeological understandings of power and the focus on inequality.
Following Francis Dupuis-Déri, a state of anarchy is ‘the lived experience of a social practice without leaders or hierarchy. […] The usual way it is expressed is “order without power”, meaning community based, collective organisation without [top down] power, authority, or coercion, and without rules of punishments’ (Dupuis-Déri & Déri Reference Dupuis-Déri and Déri2017, 16). Some anarchists, along with many anthropologists and archaeologists, mistakenly see egalitarianism as a natural starting point from which inequality emerges (e.g. Zerzan Reference Zerzan1994). Wengrow and Graeber (Reference Wengrow and Graeber2015; see also Graeber & Wengrow Reference Graeber and Wengrow2021) challenge this assumption, suggesting instead that the archaeological record preserves the traces of experimentation with, or seasonal cycling of, a variety of social systems, embedding various elements of egalitarianism and hierarchy. As the Black Trowel Collective notes (2016), ‘Anarchists, and thus anarchist archaeologists, have long recognised that organisational complexity is not produced simply from elite control, but also forms through heterarchies and networked collaborations.’
Anarchists recognize the structures of oppression, subjugation and exclusion that exist now also existed in past societies and will remain in existence if left unchallenged. We recognize the wide variation in relationships that different groups have with hierarchy, especially when expressed through soft power and carefully circumscribed. Following the Kwapa anarchist Eepa (2020), ‘it is possible to characterise positions of hierarchy within some Indigenous systems as hierarchies based on respect, not domination’ (see also Fowles Reference Fowles and Campbell2014). Moreover, hierarchies can exist within limiting structures, again as Eepa (2020) explains: ‘another position for leadership was only active during times of war. The kwinemi (war chief) was selected by all Kwapa people, men & women, at a general meeting. His selection was based on his oration, his dreams for how to accomplish the war.’ Anarchists recognize the multiplicities of hierarchy, and in so doing, accept the multiplicity of anarchies that can exist.
Anarchism offers us intricate, sophisticated theories of power.
Early anarchist understandings saw power as inextricably linked with authority (e.g. Bakunin [1872] Reference Bakunin1950). This belief underpins the misconception that, at some moment in the past, inequality emerged from a prior natural state of total egalitarianism (e.g. Zerzan Reference Zerzan2012, 110–47). Many anarchists now see power as a resource that is distributed throughout society, something that is also recognized in many Indigenous knowledge systems (e.g. Tomlinson & Tengan Reference Tomlinson and Tengan2016). The anarchist historian Alan Carter (Reference Carter and Goodway1989) argued that history emerges from the tensions in the distribution of power and the tensions between cooperation and competition.
In an archaeology of equality, power is like a body of water. In one time and place, it may be a widely dispersed wetland; in another, a fast-flowing river through a desert, accessible to all, but local only to some; elsewhere, a deep, cool reservoir behind a dam in which one person frolics while the downstream swamplands and rivers go dry. We seek to understand all of these modalities of power, how the wetlands were created, maintained, and destroyed.
A past rich in consensus-building, collective action and opposition to the centralization of power is a past that offers hope for a more equal future. In the words of Élisée Reclus (Reference Reclus1894), ‘there were “acrates” before the anarchists, and the acrates had not yet imagined the name of their learned formation that countless generations would succeed. In all ages there have been free men, those contemptuous of the law, men living without any master. […] But if anarchy is as old as humanity, those who represent it nevertheless bring something new to the world.’
Anarchism gives us a path, one of many, towards bell hooks’ ‘place of hope’.
Archaeologies of equality: prefigurative approaches
Structures that try to preserve the top at the expense of the foundation are not sustainable. All trees need roots, all roots need water. Without water, the roots die. Without roots, the tree falls. And a [new] forest grows where there was once only shade.
Black Trowel Collective (2021)Archaeology has produced a ‘chronopolitics’ that has overemphasized and mis-recognized the importance of non-horizontally organized societies. This leads to an archaeological record that makes hierarchy the natural outcome and squashes alternatives, many of which are Indigenous and Black histories (Borck Reference Borck2018a). This is unsurprising, given archaeology's origins as a leisure pursuit of the wealthy and educated, a pattern that has not entirely changed in academia despite decades of work to make the field ‘more diverse’ (e.g. Heath-Stout Reference Heath-Stout2020).
A call to arms, then: It is not enough to simply be against. We must produce creative alternatives in the present.
Anarchist archaeologies prefigure the possibilities of an egalitarian future by emphasizing the proliferation of societies of equals in the past, as well as the often aberrant nature of hierarchies, the current capitalist and colonial order being one of the worst our species has created.
Here, we offer four brief vignettes focusing on equal pasts. Space limits us from offering extensive accounts of each case study (see instead Flexner et al. Reference Flexner, Willie, Lorey, Alderson, Williams and Ieru2016; Reference Flexner, Lindstrom, Hickey, Kapere, Verschuuren and Brown2018; Frieman & Lewis Reference Frieman and Lewis2022; Frieman et al. Reference Frieman, Jones, Lewis, Ibsen, Ilves, Maixner, Messal and Schneeweiß2022; Borck Reference Borck, Harry and Herr2018b; Borck & Clark Reference Borck, Clark, Rice, Simon and Loendorf2023; Politopoulos Reference Politopoulos2020), but the goal is simply to demonstrate the potential of using archaeological, ethnographic and historical data to construct accounts of the past that counter the notion that inequality is somehow normal or inevitable. We describe an archaeology that does not valorize or respect kings, pyramids, or great empires (as current archaeology often implicitly does). Instead, we explore the possibilities of an archaeology that understands the importance of societies or social groups that value—and intentionally work towards—mutual aid, tolerance, community and generosity. We probe the edges of hierarchical societies to examine sites of resistance, and the ways that horizontal organization could be brought into being within unequal social spaces and polities.
It is towards this reorganization that we begin to construct an archaeology of equality alongside similar arguments (e.g. Becker & Juengst Reference Becker and Juengst2020; Hodder Reference Hodder2022; Paynter Reference Paynter1989; Sanger Reference Sanger2023). We build an archaeology of equality to demonstrate that other social orders are not only possible, but desirable and achievable across near and distant futures. Our case studies in archaeologies of equality span both time and space, from centuries of tradition in the South Pacific to the margins of the Roman Empire, to the spaces of resistance in Southwestern North America, to the very centres of West Asian royal urbanism.
Vanuatu: chiefs against centralization
There have been many chiefs named Iarisi on the island of Tanna in southern Vanuatu. Archaeological evidence points to at least 400 years of communal feasting in the area around Iarisi's village. Local traditions indicate there would have been a Iarisi at each of these events (Flexner et al. Reference Flexner, Willie, Lorey, Alderson, Williams and Ieru2016). As a yani en dete (‘talking chief’ or orator), Iarisi was responsible for maintaining balance and order. He made sure people worked in their gardens, as he himself worked. Magical specialists in the village would guarantee abundant harvests using the powered stones that encouraged production of root crops, fruits and vegetables. There was plenty of food even during periodic disasters such as volcanic eruptions or cyclones. When reef and mangrove systems needed to recover, Iarisi, like other chiefs of Tanna, could place a tabu on the marine environment to ensure its continued productivity (Flexner et al. Reference Flexner, Lindstrom, Hickey, Kapere, Verschuuren and Brown2018).
Iarisi was there to mediate disputes and maintain the peace. When war became unavoidable, the yani ensured it was brought to an end quickly. As a good chief, Iarisi would bring plentiful yam bundles and the largest pigs to give away at the nieri (annual pig exchange festival). He would select the most skilful dancers from among the villages for the annual nekowiar (dance festival). The women of the villages would use their magic to guarantee that their dancers would be the most beautiful, and dance the best. Each evening, Tannese male society dissolves itself and is reconstituted through the whispers of spirits and ancestors. A good chief brings the strongest kava to the imwarim (kava drinking ground) to ensure his friends and allies achieve a dizzying high followed by a peaceful slumber where they can receive ancestral wisdom (Bonnemaison Reference Bonnemaison1994, 182; Brunton Reference Brunton1979).
Iarisi, of course, was but one chief among many. There was and is a proliferation of chiefly titles across Tanna. According to one mid twentieth-century survey, a chief could be found among every 11 Tannese (Guiart Reference Guiart1956, 9). Titles have to be earned, and authority only comes from action. The highest chiefly attributes are generosity and ability to forge consensus. Titles bestow power, but they are also a burden. Disruptive young men could be given titles that channel their energy into useful activities, such as managing relationships with outsiders. Hosting elaborate feasts can be a pathway to power or prestige, but feasts in Tanna are about maintaining abundance and balancing competition. All gardens produce surplus, all surplus produces pigs. Pigs and yams can be used to gain or maintain one of thousands of titles on the island (Flexner et al. Reference Flexner, Lindstrom, Hickey, Kapere, Verschuuren and Brown2018, 256–9). Titles can bring prestige, but there are so many of them that constant competition through feasting, games and occasionally warfare (which involves some amount of feasting and gamesmanship) makes it impossible for any singular paramount authority to emerge on the island (Spriggs Reference Spriggs and Kirch1986, 16–18).
The arrangement in Tanna is not unique in the island societies of Vanuatu. Chiefly systems of Vanuatu use complex grade-taking ceremonies to ensure that rank is earned rather than bestowed, while maintaining social balance and harmony (Earle & Spriggs Reference Earle and Spriggs2015, 522–5, 529). Sometimes, these ceremonies took place among monumental spaces in stone, soil and vegetation, which are only partly visible in the archaeological record (Ballard Reference Ballard2023; Bedford Reference Bedford, Leclerc and Flexner2019). Roi Mata, perhaps the most famous individual in Vanuatu's Indigenous history, is known primarily for his abdication and rearrangement of power accumulated during a chiefly lifetime. Upon his death, Roi Mata was buried with his main warriors, retainers and wives. Having accumulated great authority during life, Roi Mata literally buried his hierarchy with his body (there is evidence from the burials that not all were interred willingly: see Spriggs Reference Spriggs1997, 209–11) in a ceremony that simultaneously dispersed his wealth and titles widely among the living, leaving no heirs and no paramount, and set up a stable heterarchy that has persisted for over 600 years (Ballard Reference Ballard2016; Garanger Reference Garanger1972).
Cornwall: communities against empire
How does a community resist the tsunami pull of empire? History tells us the Roman empire broke like a wave over the European hinterlands, smashing up settlements, reorganizing the landscape, shifting anything of value not tied down and mixing in muddy eddies with local ways of being, doing and believing. In Britain, at the far edge of this inundation, we see myriad changes in response to the Roman invasion and domination (Mattingly Reference Mattingly2006): new infrastructure, like roads, walls and military installations; new material culture, including whole new suites of ceramics likely linked to new foods and dining practices; new types of settlement, including urban centres and hinterland estates called villas; and new social practices, from dress to funerary rite to ritual practice.
But in Cornwall, the far southwestern corner of southern Britain, there is no clear break with tradition following the Roman invasion. Shifts in pottery forms, house styles and landscape division in the first centuries of the first millennium ce make clear that neither culture nor technology were stagnant, but these changes demonstrate clear continuity with earlier practices and little obvious Roman intrusion into daily life (Borlase Reference Borlase2020). Prior to the late twentieth century, it could be hypothesized that perhaps Cornwall lay above the waterline of the Roman invasion. Finds of coins, roads, milestones and (notably) four Roman military forts disprove that guess (Thomas Reference Thomas2021).
The increasing abundance of Roman infrastructure and materials in Cornwall suggests an equivalent abundance of Roman people and Roman-derived (or Romano-British) practices. Yet, instead of the transformations seen elsewhere in Roman Britain, Cornish archaeologists have documented a landscape divided up by enclosed manor farms that predated the Roman occupation of Cornwall and continued for several centuries after the wave rolled back (Rose & Preston-Jones Reference Rose, Preston-Jones, Hooke and Burnell1995). This pattern of settlement testifies to a complex but extremely stable network of power and practice, likely based on carefully maintained kin connections (Frieman & Lewis Reference Frieman and Lewis2022).
With the Roman reorganization of Brittany and northwest France, longstanding cross-channel kin ties attenuated; and, as the Romans took control of the rich Cornish ore sources, local strategies for wealth accumulation shifted from copper to cattle (Frieman et al. Reference Frieman, Jones, Lewis, Ibsen, Ilves, Maixner, Messal and Schneeweiß2022). Although elites seem to have been present in Cornwall prior to the Roman invasion, social power was dispersed through complex horizontal ties of kinship and obligation, a pattern that continues throughout the first millennium ce (Thomas Reference Thomas2021). Without a centralized elite to co-opt or convert and lacking the ability to infiltrate networks of power built around lineage, affiliation, marriage, access to land and shared grazing rights, Romans and their culture had few inlets into Cornish society. Meanwhile, local families ate some introduced foods, wore some new brooches, occasionally hammered Roman hobnails into the soles of their boots (Johnston et al. Reference Johnston, Moore, Fasham, Quinnell, Gale and Scaife1998–99), and the imperial wave receded, having caused only minimal disruption.
American Southwest: axiology against the state
No extensive and long-term state system ever solidified in the American Southwest, excepting potentially Chaco Canyon (e.g. Lekson Reference Lekson2018). There have been many attempts to explain this, particularly since states developed in other environmentally similar parts of the world (e.g. Yoffee Reference Yoffee, Cordell, Judge and Piper2001). Many archaeologists characterize this as a paucity. For example, when movements towards states are shortened, they are often described as a failure, or a collapse (e.g. Scheffer et al. Reference Scheffer, van Nes, Bird, Bocinsky and Kohler2021). However, states are not inevitable and, as anarchist theories and Indigenous philosophies and oral histories remind us, they can be deliberately avoided by dismantling their early forms (e.g. Borck & Clark Reference Borck, Clark, Rice, Simon and Loendorf2023; Estes Reference Estes2019; Simpson Reference Simpson2017; Wilcox Reference Wilcox2010). Through an archaeology of equality, the traditional interpretations of this as failure historically to produce states instead becomes the success of the American Southwest to avoid, even destroy, nascent states (see also Fowles Reference Fowles and Alt2010).
At the centre of these successful dissolutions of emerging state structures was probably a common concept that still exists in most Indigenous societies in the Southwest. The exact meaning and name varies from group to group. For the Apache it is Ghózhó (balance: e.g. Laluk Reference Laluk2021), for the various O'Odham it is Himdag (way of life: Martinez Reference Martinez and Hill2019), for the Tewa Pueblos it is Wo-wa-tsi-tu-wa-ji (seeking life: Naranjo & Swentzell Reference Naranjo and Swentzell1989). While each is unique, all revolve around balance as a central tenet—a concern with making sure each individual and each community maintains their balance with each other, their neighbours (human and otherwise) and their environment.
These values of balance regularly end up at odds with societies where power centralized with a few individuals. In the American Southwest, sometimes immediately, but usually within a few generations, social movements against centralized power emerged, either as a singular large scale or as many small-scale ones (e.g. Russell et al. Reference Russell, Nez and Martinez2011; Wilcox Reference Wilcox2009). Going back to Chaco Canyon, this construction of equality appears to have happened in a few different instances as communities responded to the centralized power system that grew within, and as a result of, the Chaco Phenomenon (e.g. Borck Reference Borck, Harry and Herr2018b; Fowles Reference Fowles and Alt2010).
One of these resistances occurred to the east of Chaco Canyon. Groups of farmers, who are labelled the Gallina culture by archaeologists, moved to an uninhabited highlands region away from an expanding Chacoan system around 1100 ce (Borck & Simpson Reference Borck and Simpson2017). The similarity between Gallina houses and material culture, lack of elite goods, and architectural forms that reference houses from the distant past led to archaeologists interpreting the Gallina as people who ‘developed only a rudimentary and belated form of Anasazi culture, little influenced by the achievements of their neighbors’ (Green Reference Green1962, 154).
The axiology (i.e. the nature of one's values) of the researchers (sensu Wilson Reference Wilson2008), becomes clear within those semantics. Growth, expansion, constant innovation, aggregation; these fundamental aspects of colonialism and capitalism are seen as positive values. Moves away from those, or prioritizing values like sustainability or creating accountable relationships, are assigned negative values and terms like collapse or postclassic (Borck & Clark Reference Borck, Clark, Rice, Simon and Loendorf2023).
Chaco Canyon, the heartland of the Chaco Phenomenon, is considered sacred by many Indigenous groups in the Southwest because of their ancestors’ achievements there, yet many also see it as a place where things went wrong. As Rina Swentzell (Reference Swentzell and Noble2004, 50), a philosopher and architectural historian from Santa Clara Pueblo, wrote about her first visit to the place that her community considers ancestral and sacred:
It was clear that the purpose of these great villages was not to restate their oneness with the earth … They were not about the Pueblo belief in the capability of everyone, including children, to participate in daily activities … [T]he structures had been built by [those] who embraced a social-political-religious hierarchy and envisioned control and power over place, resources, and people.
Indigenous histories in the Southwest are complex, multi-vocal and non-linear. They are often infused with axiologies at odds with the capitalist-oriented colonialism that glorifies constant productivity, growth and competition. Running counter to the axiology of so many archaeologies of inequality, these histories are often effaced by Western scholars who have trouble seeing beyond their personal epistemologies and ingrained values. Contemporary Indigenous groups in the Southwest like the Tewa and the O'Odham are embodiments of thrivance (Acebo Reference Acebo, Panich and Gonzalez2021) as their communities have flowered even in the face of ongoing genocide. Their very histories laid the foundation for those centuries of resistance. Yet, these histories are scraped off the page by academic acts of settler colonialism intent on rewriting and limiting the meaning of success and achievement: on stealing not just land, but pasts.
In the case of the Gallina, what was lost was a social movement, a revolution. The Gallina moved into their highland environments and reorganized their material structures and social systems in ways that intentionally built equitability. This was both local and regional. They focused on household autonomy by moving from centralized housing to dispersed communities while maintaining widespread relationships and accountability through large-scale commons-based agricultural systems and food distribution. Evidence of inequality within and between households is limited, and most labour that in other societies would lead to surplus was instead poured into their massive terrace systems and their lovingly crafted single-family homes (Borck Reference Borck, Harry and Herr2018b; Borck & Simpson Reference Borck and Simpson2017). Network analyses of non-local, curated (i.e. non-contemporary) ceramics also indicate that the Gallina ‘decided to step out of a cultural and ideological trajectory diametrically opposed to their ideas on how life should be’ (Borck Reference Borck, Harry and Herr2018b, 111).
Assyria: workers against elites
Assyria and its capitals have long fascinated the western mind, sparking the imagination with their complex giant palaces, cryptic ziggurats and treasures of gold and ivory. And, of course, their kings. The city of Sennacherib, we say for Nineveh, the city of Sargon for Dur-Šarrukēn (it is named for him, after all!). But not even in the wildest imaginings can we see Sennacherib or Sargon laying down bricks and mortar under the scorching sun to build a wall in exchange for a bowl of grain. Rarely, in fact, does research consider those who actually built these cities, as they are often invisible in the archaeological horizon, and only sparsely mentioned in texts.
And yet they were legion. To construct the mudbrick wall of Dur-Šarrukēn alone, the estimated amount of required labour ranges between 3.8 and 5 million work-days, or anywhere between 1000 and 1500 individuals working every single day for 11 years (Politopoulos Reference Politopoulos, Düring and Plugin press). The Assyrians have left us with records of people often collectively called the ‘labour force’ whose efforts (paid for in blood, sweat and bowls of grain) are quantified to estimate the productivity of empires (Politopoulos Reference Politopoulos2020, 141). But the people themselves, the harsh conditions they endured and the ways they adapted to and resisted these were almost immediately buried beneath the rubble of history and subsumed into the glory of their kings.
There are various forms of forced labour in Assyria, from Assyrian citizens completing their mandatory state duty (iklu) to the thousands of deportees, people displaced from their own land by war and conquest (Lorenzon & Wallis Reference Lorenzon and Wallis2023). And while these people are often rendered invisible, we get some glimpses of resistance from texts. An example comes from a text talking about 125 workers who did not perform their daily tasks of carrying straw, which put a hold on the production of glazed bricks (Parpola Reference Parpola and Caubet1995, 65). Such acts of everyday resistance illustrate that the ‘labor force’ was not an amorphous mass of passive individuals. To write an archaeology worthy of their efforts and oppression, we can reorient ourselves away from the kingly outputs to the builders’ own relationships of resistance, care, commitment and solidarity, forms of mutual aid that can emerge within lower strata of societies—what David Graeber (Reference Graeber2011) called everyday communism.
So how would that look in the construction site of Dur-Šarrukēn? Admittedly one can only hypothesize. Actions of everyday care and solidarity, especially among the least powerful, tend to be materially ephemeral, and records mandated by kings rarely take note of them. But we can articulate a past that does not echo the soldier's whip crack in its drive to move history forward. Rather, we must focus on the helping hand of one worker to the other, the sharing of bread, the sharing of load, the solidarity in resistance and the commitment to making it to the next day. To date, we have been too distracted by the glory of kingship to remember the hands that laid down courses upon courses of bricks, mortar and reeds. But without them, no walls would stand to glorify those long-dead kings. At the end of the day, it was these thousands of workers that were on the ground, building cities up. The stories of the kings have been told for centuries; we should be telling the stories of the people.
Radical pasts for more equal futures
The past offers us fertile ground from which to cultivate the present towards a better future for human and non-human alike. But we must choose the seeds we plant with care so that our harvest is diverse, sustainable, beautiful and nutritious. This is what it means to prefigure.
Archaeologists, and anyone who works to bring the past into dialogue with the present, are well equipped to help humanity understand how structures that promote human equality and autonomy, or human oppression and misery, came to exist (Graeber & Wengrow Reference Graeber and Wengrow2021). We echo Graeber's (Reference Graeber2004, 105) observation that ‘we have tools at our fingertips that could be of enormous importance for human freedom. Let's start taking some responsibility for it.’ Archaeological studies of inequality, exclusion and oppression have, for the most part, shirked this responsibility by naturalizing existing structures of power and authority, instead of focusing on the mechanisms that have built and could help build more equitable relations (e.g. Kohler et al. Reference Kohler, Smith and Bogaard2017).
Recognizing that our present modalities affect our interpretative framework (Gero Reference Gero1985; Tuhiwai Smith Reference Tuhiwai Smith2021), we argue that archaeology is not and has never been just about the past: it speaks to our own world and shapes our future imaginaries (Black Trowel Collective et al. Reference Azorin and Blackmore2024). This is why contemporary authoritarians justify acts of domination and discrimination by anchoring them in the deep past. In this, they must be opposed. Applying the concepts, tools and methods that capitalists and colonizers have developed to quantify, classify, measure, track and increase inequality and then retrojecting them indiscriminately into the past is a fool's errand (Lippert Reference Lippert2006). Archaeologists are not just failing to use the master's tools to dismantle the master's house (Lorde Reference Lorde and Lorde1984); we are using those tools to reinforce the foundations and build them a conservatory extension.
With this article we seek to germinate a range of approaches to equality and inequality that might blossom into a different future. We have laid out a garden of ideas into which we invite our colleagues to explore and experiment, to plant their own seeds (Fig. 3) and to decide which are the weeds and which the productive crop.
There is no question we are living in an age of cascading disasters, but we find hope in the myriad pasts, the invisible people, those who refuse to be invisible, and all of their struggles to resist domination and decimation. We, along with many others both inside and outside archaeology, tell their stories as part of our work towards a world that values and cares for people, non-humans and environments horizontally and via an ethos of care.
Acknowledgements
The authors note that they participated equally in the drafting of this article, and the author order is alphabetical by first name. Thanks to the editors of CAJ and two anonymous reviewers for suggesting ways to improve the draft manuscript. We would also like to thank the members of the Black Trowel Collective for their support, input, solidarity and their efforts to build a better and more inclusive archaeology. Elements of CJF's contribution were funded by Australian Research Council DECRA DE170100464 (‘Conservatism as a dynamic response to the diffusion of innovations’). JLF's research in Vanuatu was supported by the Australian Research Council (DE130101703 and DP160103578). Portions of LB's contribution were funded by National Science Foundation #1522851. The authors acknowledge the irony of researching anarchist ideas using state funding.