Generations after generations have been living and dying on this planet for millions and millions of years. These ancestors have built societies, created cultures, and produced technologies. Yet many questions still remain about our ancestry and what relevance, if any, these past cultures hold for us. Patterns in Prehistory takes an in-depth look at humankind's first three million years. From the origins of early hominids several million years ago to the evolution of the first great states and civilizations, this comprehensive survey of world prehistory also confronts important philosophical issues about the study of the past. The author reflects on the archaeological methods and theories of the 1960s and 70s while reviewing the methodological revisions of the 80s and 90s, relating the archaeological data from hundreds of sites to the great questions of prehistorical change. He focuses on the four great transformations in the history of our the evolution of culture itself; the first appearance of us, Homo Sapiens; the evolution of agriculture; and the first appearances of cultural and social complexity in the form of the great civilizations of antiquity. Thoroughly revised and updated, this fourth edition incorporates the most recent archaeological discoveries and addresses the insights and limitations of the new wave of "post-processual" or "cognitive" archaeology. It incorporates the latest research, particularly the new discoveries in Mesoamerican sites, Peru, southwest Asia, and Egypt, as well as new scholarship and theories on the origins of complex societies. Wenke also places more emphasis on gender, race, ideology, and religion. Ideal for courses in world prehistory and archeology, this new edition has been shortened to be more accessible to students.
This is a wonderful book. I started reading it to find descriptions of earlier cultures as part of the research for a novel I'm writing, and I was not disappointed. It's a masterpiece in explaining and exploring the development of human beings as they adapt to the environment, and what particular stages of development mean in terms of cultural practice, agriculture, population growth, and much more.
Wenke starts the book by asking the question "what is culture?", among other things, and the answers are challenging. Wenke's approach to the whole book is revealed in that first chapter. He is not there to promulgate his own definite theory of human development, but to do a survey across numerous experts in archaeology, palaeo-anthropology, palaeontology and much more besides. The breadth and detail and the sheer level of research is deeply impressive.
There are surprises along the way. One of the answers to that question about culture is to define it as a means of using energy more efficiently. That is: that when you learn how to do something (make pots, grow crops, build spaceships, etc), the next generation isn't then forced to discover it again. They are taught how to do what the previous generation learned through culture. "On the shoulders of giants..." etc. That's only one definition, but it shows you how you're going to have to think around things and entertain fresh perspectives.
The first part of the book is dedicated to the fossil record of the earliest hominids, right back to australopithecus and earlier, then reconstruct the life and mindset through the findings of experts. It's absolutely gripping to see human traits begin to reveal themselves early on, and to follow the development of humans by studying the fossil record.
The survey is of the whole world, with Wenke looking at whatever archaeological evidence is available and comparing how different humans developed in Africa, China, Indonesia, Europe, the Americas and so on. This is the format for each section of the book.
So it is that we follow human development through Homo Erectus, Homo Sapiens Neanderthelensis to Homo Sapiens Sapiens. It's not a straight line, though, as Wenke makes clear. There are overlaps in the species coexisting at times, or huge gaps in the fossil record. Yet there are startling moments when a completely different species shows itself to be recognisably like us. It's brilliant.
Thus we go on through the development of hunter-gatherer cultures, fisherfolk and others of the Pliocene and Pleistocene and Holocene epochs, until suddenly, maybe 10,000 to 12,000 years ago, there's a sudden step-change in culture as the great civilizations arise. Sumeria, Babylonia, Egypt, China - all apparently reliant on the new invention of agriculture, leading to a massive rise in population and technology.
What's strange to contemplate thereafter is how humans took literally millions of years to get to that point, and then from there to here it's only a few thousand years in which the gallop of cultural development accelerated so fast that in that brief time we are now able to destroy the world with our cultural "advances". It's quite a thought to think that we have nuclear weapons in the hands of people who are not so different from the people who were cultural productions of the New Stone Age.
This is an extraordinary book that invites you to contemplate the nature of being. Highly recommended.
This is a highly informative text although dry. I wouldn't recommend it for people that are just lightly interested in archaeology but those that are invested in the subject. The pictures are mainly in black and white, archaic, and the writing itself is redundant and heavy. It has a lot to teach though, but I wouldn't read it for fun.
While parts of the book can get dry and repetitive, the majority of the material was extremely interesting and presented in a clear, elucidating style. The first half of the book is focused on paleoarchaeology, theories for the rise of complex societies, and the development of human prehistory as a science. The second half is presented as a series of case studies examining early human societies around the globe, with tentative assertions linking the creation of diverse, complex societies to a general framework. This book is both a satisfactory introduction and overview for anyone interested in either archaeology or human prehistory.
Read this for an Anthro class. Sadly, the book didn't prove very useful for me, as it was for an introductory class and I already knew all of the information. Layout is pretty decent, but it's a little bland, especially for people who aren't into this stuff. Good for a start.