Chris Gosden: Humans, Gebunden
Humans
- The First Seven Million Years
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- Verlag:
- Oxford University Press, 02/2027
- Einband:
- Gebunden
- Sprache:
- Englisch
- ISBN-13:
- 9780197869130
- Umfang:
- 512 Seiten
- Erscheinungstermin:
- 9.2.2027
- Hinweis
-
Achtung: Artikel ist nicht in deutscher Sprache!
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Klappentext
What if everything you thought you knew about human history was only part of the story?
For generations we've been taught a tidy arc of human progress: a march from primitive ancestors to Homo sapiens , from foraging bands to farming villages, from villages to cities, states, and empires. It's a narrative that feels intuitive, and yet it obscures far more than it reveals. Humans overturns this familiar storyline, offering a truly global history that spans all continents and the full seven-million-year sweep of our past.
Drawing on new archaeological discoveries and cutting-edge scientific techniques--from the study of ancient tooth plaque to sophisticated climate modeling--Chris Gosden uncovers a world in which human evolution was never linear. Multiple hominin species overlapped, interacted, and even shared technologies and genes. Cooperation, rather than competition, emerges as the defining force of our deep past and remains the bedrock of our society. Homo sapiens did not triumph through superiority but through contingency, chance, and the slow rhythms of reproduction and survival. As people spread across the globe, they forged diverse regional lifeways while remaining connected through long-distance networks much older than modern globalization.
Across cultures and millennia, humans have been driven not simply by material needs but by enduring philosophical questions: How does the world work? What is our place within it? These inquiries gave rise to traditions, religions, and systems of meaning that shaped societies as profoundly as tools or technologies. Gosden also traces the long arc of "the commons"--the shared cultural and natural resources that sustained communities for thousands of years. He shows how the erosion of these commons through privatization, industrialization, and the pursuit of profit has fueled today's crises of inequality and environmental degradation.
Ambitious in scope and vivid in storytelling, Humans allows readers to embrace the astonishing diversity of where we have been so that we might better imagine where we are going.