Communities and Other Social Actors: Rethinking Commodities and Consumption in Global Historical Archaeology
Author(s)
Carroll, Lynda
Abstract
The relationships between people and commodities, and the processes through which goods are entangled with people’s lives can be better understood with a focus on the community. The concept of community offers a way to understand the entanglement of individuals and small groups with global processes. In addition, a focus on the community allows historical archaeologists a scale of analysis to consider the links between people, communities, and global networks of exchange, as commodities are exchanged in and out of local, regional, or global arenas.