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What Makes Civilization?: The Ancient Near East and the Future of the West [Kõva köide]

(Professor of Comparative Archaeology, University College London)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 240 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 195x130x13 mm, kaal: 282 g, 20 black and white plates; 6 maps
  • Ilmumisaeg: 25-Jan-2018
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0199699429
  • ISBN-13: 9780199699421
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 240 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 195x130x13 mm, kaal: 282 g, 20 black and white plates; 6 maps
  • Ilmumisaeg: 25-Jan-2018
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0199699429
  • ISBN-13: 9780199699421
Our attachment to ancient Mesopotamia (Iraq) and Egypt as the "birthplace of civilization", where the foundations of our own societies were laid, is as strong today as it has ever been. When the Iraq Museum in Baghdad was looted in 2003, our newspapers proclaimed "the death of history". Yet the ancient Near East also remains a source of mystery: a space of the imagination where we explore the discontents of modern civilization.

In What Makes Civilization? archaeologist David Wengrow investigates the origins of farming, writing, and cities in Egypt and Mesopotamia, and the connections between them. This is the story of how people first created kingdoms and monuments to the gods - and, just as importantly, how they adopted everyday practices that we might now take for granted, such as familiar ways of cooking food and keeping the house and body clean.

Why, he asks, have these ancient cultures, where so many features of modern life originated, come to symbolize the remote and the exotic? What challenge do they pose to our assumptions about power, progress, and civilization in human history? And are the sacrifices we now make in the name of "our" civilization really so different from those once made by the peoples of Mesopotamia and Egypt on the altars of the gods?

Arvustused

For any student studying the question of what civilisation actually is this is valuable reading. * John Bulwer, Euroclassica * Convincingly concludes that the parallel development of Mesopotamia and Egypt demonstrates the deep attachment of human societies to the concepts they live by, and the inequalities they are prepared to endure in order to preserve those guiding principles. * Nature * What Makes Civilization? [ ...] is expertly grounded, thoughtfully written and discreetly radical in its findings. * Dominic Green, Minerva01/01/2019 * What Makes Civilization? is well written for a student or educated lay-person audience...when the past is being employed to understand the present or predict the future of human societies, archaeologists must be part of the discussion. * Current Anthropology * This book promises a lot and delivers even more...It guides readers into the heart of the sources of civilization. * Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institue * Provocative....stimulating... * Steven Snape, History Today * Lively and insightful work. * Geoff Ward, Western Daily Press *

List of Maps and Illustrations
viii
Chronology Chart xii
Preface and Acknowledgements (2017) xiii
Introduction: A Clash of Civilizations? 1(16)
PART I THE CAULDRON OF CIVILIZATION
17(134)
1 Camouflaged Borrowings
19(13)
2 On the Trail of Blue-Haired Gods
32(7)
3 Neolithic Worlds
39(15)
4 The (First) Global Village
54(12)
5 Origin of Cities
66(22)
6 From the Ganges to the Danube: The Bronze Age
88(21)
7 Cosmology and Commerce
109(16)
8 The Labours of Kingship
125(26)
PART II FORGETTING THE OLD REGIME
151(23)
9 Enlightenment from a Dark Source
153(10)
10 Ruined Regimes: Egypt at the Revolution
163(11)
Conclusion: What Makes Civilization? 174(3)
Further Reading 177(32)
Picture Acknowledgements 209(2)
Index 211
David Wengrow is Professor of Comparative Archaeology at the UCL Institute of Archaeology. He also held positions at Christ Church, University of Oxford, the Warburg Institute, and the Institute of Fine Arts, New York University. He has conducted fieldwork in Africa and the Middle East, most recently in Iraqi Kurdistan, and writes widely on the early cultures and societies of those regions, including their role in shaping modern political identities.