Publication | Closed Access
The Origins of the Village Revisited: From Nuclear to Extended Households
240
Citations
24
References
2002
Year
Historical GeographyNuclear FamiliesNuclear Family HouseholdsEducationArchaeologySocial ChangeSocial SciencesRural SociologyExtended HouseholdsRural CultureHousingSocio-economic ChangeEconomic DemographyPopulation HistoryCultureCommunity DevelopmentSociologyAnthropologyNear EastSocial AnthropologyCultural Anthropology
In Mesoamerica and the Near East, the emergence of the village seems to have involved two stages. In the first stage, individuals were distributed through a series of small circular-to-oval structures, accompanied by communal or “shared” storage features. In the second stage, nuclear families occupied substantial rectangular houses with private storage rooms. Over the last 30 years a wealth of data from the Near East, Egypt, the Trans-Caucasus, India, Africa, and the Southwest U.S. have enriched our understanding of this phenomenon. And in Mesoamerica and the Near East, evidence suggests that nuclear family households eventually gave way to a third stage, one featuring extended family households whose greater labor force made possible extensive multifaceted economies.
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