1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910828741603321

Titolo

Human origins : contributions from social anthropology / / edited by Camilla Power, Morna Finnegan and Hilary Callane

Pubbl/distr/stampa

New York : , : Berghahn Books, , 2017

©2017

ISBN

1-78533-426-3

9781785333798 (electronic books)

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (viii, 356 pages) : illustrations, tables

Collana

Methodology and History in Anthropology

Classificazione

MS 9350

Disciplina

306

Soggetti

Ethnobiology

Ethnology

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Includes index.

Nota di contenuto

Forty years on : Biosocial anthropology revisited / Hilary Callan -- Rethinking the relationship between studies of ethnobiological knowledge and the evolution of human cultural cognition / Roy Ellen -- Towards a theory of everything / Chris Knight and Jerome Lewis -- Sexual insult and female militancy / Shirley G. Ardener -- Who sees the elephant? Sexual egalitarianism in social anthropology's room / Morna Finnegan -- From metaphor to symbols and grammar : the cumulative cultural evolution of language / Andrew D. M. Smith and Stefan Hoefler -- Reconstructing a source cosmology for African hunter-gatherers / Camilla Power -- Sounds in the night : ritual bells, therianthropes and eland relations among the Hadza / Thea Skaanes -- Human physiology, San Shamanic healing and the 'cognitive revolution' / Chris Low -- Rain serpents in Northern Australia and Southern Africa : a common ancestry? / Ian Watts -- Bedouin matrilineality revisited / Suzanne E. Joseph -- 'From Lucy to language: the archaeology of the social brain' : an open invitation for social anthropology to join the evolutionary debate / Wendy James.

Sommario/riassunto

Human Origins brings together new thinking by social anthropologists and other scholars on the evolution of human culture and society. No other discipline has more relevant expertise to consider the emergence



of humans as the symbolic species. Yet, social anthropologists have been conspicuously absent from debates about the origins of modern humans. These contributions explore why that is, and how social anthropology can shed light on early kinship and economic relations, gender politics, ritual, cosmology, ethnobiology, medicine, and the evolution of language.--