The Social Dynamics of Coalescence: Ancestral Wendat Communities 1400-1550 C.E.

abstract: Coalescence is a distinctive process of village aggregation that creates larger, socially cohesive communities from smaller, scattered villages. This dissertation asks: how do individual and collective social relationships change throughout the process of coalescence, and how might these r...

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Other Authors: Striker, Sarah (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.51684
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-516842019-02-02T03:01:14Z The Social Dynamics of Coalescence: Ancestral Wendat Communities 1400-1550 C.E. abstract: Coalescence is a distinctive process of village aggregation that creates larger, socially cohesive communities from smaller, scattered villages. This dissertation asks: how do individual and collective social relationships change throughout the process of coalescence, and how might these relationships contribute to the social cohesiveness of a coalescent community? Coalescent communities share characteristics that reveal the relationship between collective action and collective identities in their social dynamics. Collective identity is a shared sense of oneness among members of a group. It can be understood as the product of two processes: categorical and relational identification. Categorical identification is a shared association with a specific category, such as an ethnic group or a religious association. Relational identification is the product of direct, interpersonal interaction. The potential for a group to engage in collective action is linked to the intensity (prominence as compared to other aspects of identity) and scale (social unit and size of group) of categorical and relational identification. Patterns in the intensity and scale of categorical and relational identification are used to trace changing social dynamics through the process of community coalescence. The case study is a sequence of four sites that were successively occupied by the same Ancestral Wendat (Iroquoian) community over a period of 150 years in south-central Ontario. The intensity of categorical identification is assessed by measuring the consistency of decorative styles among pottery vessels. The intensity of relational identification is assessed by measuring production variability among ceramic pots and pipes using microscopic characterization. The analyses reveal a correlation between the intensity and scale of categorical and relational identification and village-scale social cohesion and collective action. Village-scale categorical identification was less intensive during the period of initial aggregation, with a subsequent increase in intensity observed at fully coalesced sites where evidence of social cohesion and village-scale collective action is present. As coalescence progressed, the intensity of relational identification at the village scale decreased. This evidence suggests that changing dynamics of categorical and relational ties among community members were intertwined with the development of social cohesion and the increased potential for village-scale collective action at the culmination of coalescence. Dissertation/Thesis Striker, Sarah (Author) Hegmon, Michelle (Advisor) Michelaki, Kostalena (Advisor) Williamson, Ron (Committee member) Abbott, David (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Archaeology Social research Ceramic Coalescence Huron-Wendat Iroquois Ontario Social theory eng 271 pages Doctoral Dissertation Anthropology 2018 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.51684 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ 2018
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Archaeology
Social research
Ceramic
Coalescence
Huron-Wendat
Iroquois
Ontario
Social theory
spellingShingle Archaeology
Social research
Ceramic
Coalescence
Huron-Wendat
Iroquois
Ontario
Social theory
The Social Dynamics of Coalescence: Ancestral Wendat Communities 1400-1550 C.E.
description abstract: Coalescence is a distinctive process of village aggregation that creates larger, socially cohesive communities from smaller, scattered villages. This dissertation asks: how do individual and collective social relationships change throughout the process of coalescence, and how might these relationships contribute to the social cohesiveness of a coalescent community? Coalescent communities share characteristics that reveal the relationship between collective action and collective identities in their social dynamics. Collective identity is a shared sense of oneness among members of a group. It can be understood as the product of two processes: categorical and relational identification. Categorical identification is a shared association with a specific category, such as an ethnic group or a religious association. Relational identification is the product of direct, interpersonal interaction. The potential for a group to engage in collective action is linked to the intensity (prominence as compared to other aspects of identity) and scale (social unit and size of group) of categorical and relational identification. Patterns in the intensity and scale of categorical and relational identification are used to trace changing social dynamics through the process of community coalescence. The case study is a sequence of four sites that were successively occupied by the same Ancestral Wendat (Iroquoian) community over a period of 150 years in south-central Ontario. The intensity of categorical identification is assessed by measuring the consistency of decorative styles among pottery vessels. The intensity of relational identification is assessed by measuring production variability among ceramic pots and pipes using microscopic characterization. The analyses reveal a correlation between the intensity and scale of categorical and relational identification and village-scale social cohesion and collective action. Village-scale categorical identification was less intensive during the period of initial aggregation, with a subsequent increase in intensity observed at fully coalesced sites where evidence of social cohesion and village-scale collective action is present. As coalescence progressed, the intensity of relational identification at the village scale decreased. This evidence suggests that changing dynamics of categorical and relational ties among community members were intertwined with the development of social cohesion and the increased potential for village-scale collective action at the culmination of coalescence. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Anthropology 2018
author2 Striker, Sarah (Author)
author_facet Striker, Sarah (Author)
title The Social Dynamics of Coalescence: Ancestral Wendat Communities 1400-1550 C.E.
title_short The Social Dynamics of Coalescence: Ancestral Wendat Communities 1400-1550 C.E.
title_full The Social Dynamics of Coalescence: Ancestral Wendat Communities 1400-1550 C.E.
title_fullStr The Social Dynamics of Coalescence: Ancestral Wendat Communities 1400-1550 C.E.
title_full_unstemmed The Social Dynamics of Coalescence: Ancestral Wendat Communities 1400-1550 C.E.
title_sort social dynamics of coalescence: ancestral wendat communities 1400-1550 c.e.
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.51684
_version_ 1718970044493332480