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Darwinian Archaeologies - Interdisciplinary Contributions to Archaeology 1996 edition
Maschner
Darwinian Archaeologies - Interdisciplinary Contributions to Archaeology 1996 edition
Maschner
Just over 20 years ago the publication of two books indicated the reemergence of Darwinian ideas on the public stage.
Marc Notes: Includes bibliographical references and index. Table of Contents: Introduction: Darwinian Archaeologies: An Introductory Essay; H. Maschner, S. Mithen. Cultural and Behavioral Selection: The Historical Development of an Evolutionary Archaeology: A Selectionist Approach; M. J. O'Brien. Explaining the Change from Biface to Flake Technology: A Selectionist Application; A. L. Abbot, et al. Cultural Virus Theory and the Eusocial Pottery Assemblage; B. R. S. Cullen. Organized Dissonance: Multiple Code Structures in the Replication of Human Culture; R. Fletcher. Paths to Revisionism in CulturalBehavioral Selection: Individuals and Dual Inheritance: Kin Selection and the Origins of Hereditary Social Inequality: A Case Study from the Northern Northwest Coast; H. D. G. Maschner, J. Q. Patton. Archaeology, Style, and the Theory of Coevolution; K. M. Ames. Style, Function, and Cultural Evolutionary Processes; R. L. Bettinger, et al. In Search of the Watchmaker: Attribution of Agency in Natural and Cultural Selection; P. Graves-Brown. Cognition and the Evolution of Mental Adaptations: Weak Modularity and the Evolution of Human Social Behavior; J. Steele. The Origin of Art: Natural Signs, Mental Modularity and Visual Symbolism; S. Mithen. Overview: The State of Evolutionary Archaeology; R. L. Bettinger, P. J. Richerson. Index. Publisher Marketing: Just over 20 years ago the publication of two books indicated the reemergence of Darwinian ideas on the public stage. E. O. Wilson's Sociobiology: The New Synthesis and Richard Dawkins' The Selfish Gene, spelt out and developed the implications of ideas that had been quietly revolutionizing biology for some time. Most controversial of all, needless to say, was the suggestion that such ideas had implications for human behavior in general and social behavior in particular. Nowhere was the outcry greater than in the field of anthropology, for anthropologists saw themselves as the witnesses and defenders of human di versity and plasticity in the face of what they regarded as a biological determin ism supporting a right-wing racist and sexist political agenda. Indeed, how could a discipline inheriting the social and cultural determinisms of Boas, Whorf, and Durkheim do anything else? Life for those who ventured to chal lenge this orthodoxy was not always easy. In the mid-l990s such views are still widely held and these two strands of anthropology have tended to go their own way, happily not talking to one another. Nevertheless, in the intervening years Darwinian ideas have gradually begun to encroach on the cultural landscape in variety of ways, and topics that had not been linked together since the mid-19th century have once again come to be seen as connected. Modern genetics turns out to be of great sig nificance in understanding the history of humanity."
Contributor Bio: Maschner, Herbert D G Maschner is with the Department of Anthropology, University of Wisconsin-Madison. Contributor Bio: Shennan, Stephen Stephen Shennan is Professor of Theoretical Archaeology at University College London and Director of its Institute of Archaeology. He is the author or coauthor of many books, including "Genes, Memes, and Human History", and has edited or coedited many additional volumes, including "The Evolution of Cultural Diversity."
Media | Books Hardcover Book (Book with hard spine and cover) |
Released | October 31, 1996 |
ISBN13 | 9780306453281 |
Publishers | Springer Science+Business Media |
Pages | 264 |
Dimensions | 152 × 229 × 21 mm · 598 g |
Language | English |
Editor | Maschner, Herbert D.G. |
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