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The Domestication of the Savage Mind

The Domestication of the Savage Mind

The Domestication of the Savage Mind

Jack Goody, University of Cambridge
November 1977
Paperback
9780521292429
£22.00
GBP
Paperback

    Current theories and views on the differences in the 'mind' of human societies depend very much on a dichotomy between 'advanced' and 'primitive', or between 'open' and 'closed', or between 'domesticated' and 'savage', that is to say, between one of a whole variety of 'we-they' distinctions. Professor Goody argues that such an approach prevents any serious discussion of the mechanisms leading to long-term changes in the cognitive processes of human cultures or any adequate explanation of the changes in 'traditional' societies that are taking place in the world around us. In this book he attempts to provide the framework for a more satisfactory explanation by relating certain broad differences in 'mentalities' to the changes in the means of communication, and specifically to the series of shifts involved in the development of writing. The argument is based upon theoretical considerations, as well as empirical evidence derived from recent fieldwork in West Africa and the study of a wide range of source material on the ancient societies of the Near East.

    Product details

    November 1977
    Paperback
    9780521292429
    192 pages
    228 × 152 × 12 mm
    0.281kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • List of tables and figures
    • Preface
    • 1. Evolution and communication
    • 2. Intellectuals in pre-literate societies?
    • 3. Literacy, criticism and the growth of knowledge
    • 4. Literacy and classification: on turning the tables
    • 5. What's in a list?
    • 6. Following a formula
    • 7. The recipe, the prescription and the experiment
    • 8. The Grand Dichotomy reconsidered
    • Notes to the text
    • References
    • List of abbreviations
    • Index.
      Author
    • Jack Goody , University of Cambridge