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The Archaeology of Human Ancestry: Power, Sex and Tradition (Theoretical Archaeology Group (Tag))
 
 
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The Archaeology of Human Ancestry: Power, Sex and Tradition (Theoretical Archaeology Group (Tag)) [Hardcover]

Stephen Shennan (Editor), James Steele (Editor)

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Book Description

December 18, 1995 041511862X 978-0415118620 1
Human social life is constrained and defined by our cognitive and emotional dispositions, which are the legacy of our foraging ancestors. But how difficult is it to reconstruct the social systems and cultural traditions of those ancestors?
The Archaeology of Human Ancestry provides a stimulating and provocative answer, in which archaeologists and biological anthropologists set out and demonstrate their reconstructive methods. Contributors use observations of primates and modern hunter-gatherers to illuminate the fossil and artefactual records. Thematic treatment covers the evolution of group size; group composition and the emotional structure of social bonds; sexual dimorphism and the sexual division of labour; and the origins of human cultural traditions.
The Archaeology of Human Ancestry is an essential introduction to the subject for advanced undergraduates and researchers in archaeology and biological anthropology. It will also be used by workers in psychology, sociology and feminist studies as a resource for understanding human social origins.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

'I found myself engaged, enraged, and sometimes elated in reading it, and often added exclamations, question marks, curses, and kudos in the margins. I warmly recommend that you interact with it yourself.' - H. Martin Wobst, Antiquity

'This, the offspring of the 1992 Theoretical Archaeology Group (TAG) conference, must rank, in its breadth and diversity, as one of the most stimulating books in recent years on the evolution of hominid and early human culture ... It would be hard to come away from it without having been excited by some new thoughts or perspectives on the subjects covered.' - Journal of Human Evolution

'Most Palaeoanthropologists - not just archaeologists - will identify something of direct interest in this collection.' - The Archaeological Journal

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Within the traditions of archaeology and anthropology, a common set of oppositions is that between the biological and the social. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
hominid social systems, megalithic phenomena, local hominid network, cultural virus theory, weight sexual dimorphism, behavioural reconstruction, hominid group sizes, sham menstruation, viral phenomena, cortex ratio, relative neocortex size, viral phenomenon, hedonic mode, hominid technology, agonic mode, social learning capacities, provisioning effort, body weight dimorphism, hominid behaviour, finite social space, collective deception, forager societies, mean group size, foraging practices, total brain volume
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, Cambridge University Press, Journal of Human Evolution, Current Anthropology, Upper Palaeolithic, Academic Press, American Journal of Physical Anthropology, University of Chicago Press, Blurton Jones, Old World, Cambridge Archaeological, Oxford University Press, American Anthropologist, Folia Primatologica, World Archaeology, Aldine de Gruyter, Harvard University Press, Koobi Fora, Scientific American, Menlo Park, Olduvai Gorge, American Antiquity, Human Ecology, Maynard Smith, Journal of Anthropological Archaeology
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