The Evolution of Human Societies

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The Evolution of Human Societies

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想读的前近代社会书籍

世界史阅读计划

ISBN: 9780804740326
écrit par: Allen W. Johnson / Timothy Earle
édition: Stanford University Press
date de publication: 2000
reliure: Paperback
prix: GBP 26.99
nombre de pages: 454

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From Foraging Group to Agrarian State, Second Edition

Allen W. Johnson / Timothy Earle   

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By combining an original thesis and a representative body of ethnographic data, this ambitious work seeks to describe and explain the growth in complexity of human societies. Its emphasis is on the causes, mechanisms, and patterns of cultural evolution, which the authors explain in terms of a coherent theory of political economy--defined as the mobilization and exchange of goods and services between families. The authors show that the interconnected processes of technological change and population growth are the motor of social change, resulting in three related processes--intensification, integration, and stratification--that transform human societies over time. The validity of their theory rests on evidence drawn from 19 case studies that range widely over time and space. For this new edition, the authors have thoroughly rewritten the theoretical argument for greater clarity, updated the case materials to incorporate new research, and added a new chapter that applies their theoretical perspective to the problems of change since the industrial revolution and the globalization of trade and political influence. "Reviews of the First Edition" "In a book full of perceptive observations and persuasive arguments . . . Johnson and Earle show in masterly detail how societies articulate to their environments and . . . how they evolve." --"Ethnohistory" "A major contribution. . . . The book is a marvelous synthesis of ethnographic and historical data." --"American Journal of Sociology" "A large amount of research and thought has produced sensible and illuminating specific analyses of the mechanisms of evolutionary change. Another plus is that the writing is clear and the argument is neatly conceived." --"American Anthropologist"

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