Prehistoric Man 2 Volume Set
The Scottish archaeologist and anthropologist Daniel Wilson (1816–92) spent the latter part of his life in Canada. Published in 1862, this is a seminal work in the study of early man in which Wilson utilises studies of native tribes 'still seen there in a condition which seems to reproduce some of the most familiar phases ascribed to the infancy of the unhistoric world'. He believed that civilisations initially developed in mild climates and judged the Mayans to have been the most advanced civilisation in the New World. Twentieth-century anthropologist Bruce Trigger argued that Wilson 'interpreted evidence about human behaviour in a way that is far more in accord with modern thinking than are the racist views of Darwin and Lubbock', and it is in this light that this two-volume work can be judged.
Product details
November 2012Multiple copy pack
9781108054867
1026 pages
216 × 140 mm
1.302kg
69 b/w illus. 2 colour illus. 1 map
Out of stock in print form with no current plan to reprint
Table of Contents
- Volume 1: Preface
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The old world and the new
- 3. The primeval occupation: speech
- 4. The primeval transition: instinct
- 5. The Promethean instinct: fire
- 6. The maritime instinct: the canoe
- 7. The technological instinct: tools
- 8. The metallurgic instinct: copper
- 9. The metallurgic arts: alloys
- 10. The architectural instinct: earthworks
- 11. The hereafter: sepulchral mounds
- 12. Propitiation: sacrificial mounds
- 13. Commemoration: symbolic mounds
- 14. Progress: native civilisation
- 15. The artistic instinct: imitation. Volume 2:
- 16. Narcotic arts and superstitions
- 17. Primitive architecture: megalithic
- 18. The ceramic art: pottery
- 19. The intellectual instinct: letters
- 20. Ante-Columbian traces: colonization
- 21. The American cranial type
- 22. Artificial cranial distortion
- 23. The red blood of the West
- 24. The intrusive races
- 25. Ethnographic hypotheses: migrations
- 26. Guesses at the age of man
- Appendix.