Contemporary
Ecological-Evolutionary Books:
The following books each espouse a variant of
ecological-evolutionary theory. While they may differ in
the details, each demonstrates the power of the
ecological-evolutionary theory in furthering our understanding
of sociocultural systems and change.
Guns, Germs, and Steel
Jared Diamond, 1997, New York: W.W. Norton & Company.
Book Description: Winner of the Pulitzer Prize.
In this "artful, informative, and delightful" (William H.
McNeill, New York Review of Books) book, Jared Diamond
convincingly argues that geographical and environmental
factors shaped the modern world. Societies that had had a head
start in food production advanced beyond the hunter-gatherer
stage, and then developed religion --as well as nasty germs
and potent weapons of war --and adventured on sea and land to
conquer and decimate preliterate cultures. A major advance in
our understanding of human societies, Guns, Germs, and Steel
chronicles the way that the modern world came to be and
stunningly dismantles racially based theories of human
history. Winner of the Pulitzer Prize, the Phi Beta Kappa
Award in Science, the Rhone-Poulenc Prize, and the
Commonwealth club of California's Gold Medal.
Editorial Reviews: "An ambitious, highly
important book." --James Shreeve, New York Times
Book Review
"The scope and explanatory power of this book are
astounding." --The New Yorker
Jared Diamond...is broadly erudite, writes in a style that
pleasantly expresses scientific concepts in vernacular
American English and deals almost exclusively in questions
that should interest everyone concerned about how humanity
developed. . . .Reading Diamond is like watching someone
riding a unicycle, balancing an eel on his nose and juggling
five squealing piglets. You may or may not agree with him (I
usually do), but he rivets your attention. --Alfred
W. Crosby, Los Angeles Times
"A fascinating and extremely important book. That its
insights seem so fresh, its facts so novel and arresting, is
evidence of how little Americans --and, I suspect, most
well-educated citizens of the most important forces of human
history." --David Brown, Washington Post Book
Word
"Guns, Germs and Steel is an artful, informative and
delightful book...there is nothing like a radically new angle
of vision for bringing out unsuspected dimensions of subject
and that is what Jared Diamond has done." --William
H. McNeil, The New York Review of Books
"No scientist brings more experience from the laboratory
and field, none thinks more deeply about social issues or
addresses them with greater clarity, than Jared Diamond as
illustrated by Guns, Germs, and Steel. In this remarkably
readable book he shows how history and biology can enrich one
another to produce a deeper understanding of the human
condition." --Edward O. Wilson, Harvard
University
Industrializing America: Understanding
Contemporary Society through Classical Sociological
Analysis
Frank W. Elwell, 1999, Westport Connecticut: Praeger
Press
From the Publisher: "It deserves to be read and
used as a textbook in a wide variety of introductory courses
in sociology, anthropology and sociocultural theory. It
can also serve as a text for American studies courses since it
contains in-depth descriptions of basic trends in American
society and culture, shedding new light on the core
institutions of government, global corporations, health care
bureaucracies, food production, manufacturing and many other
features of what is often but erroneously called
'post-industrialism.' Against the main current of the
social sciences, here is a book that returns us to the
classical view that societies and cultures can best be
understood as entities whose parts fit together to form
systems." --Marvin Harris, Graduate Research
Professor Department of Anthropology University of
Florida
An analysis of any part of the social system must be firmly
rooted in a framework that outlines the whole system and the
interrelationships of the various parts. Building on
classical sociological theory, this volume proposes an
original and comprehensive systems theory of sociocultural
stability and change, which combines fundamental ecological
relationships with social structures and culture.
Relationships and concepts developed by Marx, Weber, Malthus,
Spencer, and Durkheim are explained and synthesized into a
coherent perspective, which is used to examine multiple
phenomena in modern industrial societies.
The author argues that recent changes in social structures
(for example corporations, education, or the family) and
culture (our socially created and shared symbolic
understanding of our world) are interrelated and rooted in
massive changes in population size and industrial
growth. By systematically relating the analysis of these
sociocultural phenomena to the whole and to one another this
volume presents a framework that can serve to organize and
integrate many diverse theories, insights, and much empirical
information into a comprehensive world view.
Contents:
- Cultural Materialism
- Structure of Power
- Hyper-industrialism
- Bureaucracy
- Irrationality factor
- Globalization
- Economic Rationalization
- Workplace Turmoil
- Family and Community
- Industrial Agriculture
- Managed Care
- Higher Education
- Political Campaigns
- Ideology of Technology
- Possibilities for the Future
Cultural Materialism: The Struggle for a Science
of Culture
Marvin Harris, 1979, (Reissued 2001) New York: Random
House.
From the Publisher: "...one of the most coherent
and most provocative pieces of academic anthropology to appear
in years. Harris provides a comprehensive strategy for
research in a field best characterized by the fragmentation of
its research...the ensuing arguments promise to be
fountainheads of intellectual progress."
--Library Journal
What are the proper aims and methods of anthropology, and
what does it mean to call this discipline the science of
culture? Why are such theories of culture as those of
Claude Levi-Strauss, Edward O. Wilson, Carlos Castaneda, and
Marvin Harris so widely read and debated? What do these
theories reveal about the people who hold them? How do
cultures really originate and develop?
Marvin Harris, the distinguished American anthropologist,
addresses these questions directly in this important,
controversial, and comprehensive study of the theory and
practice of his science. The foremost authority on
cultural materialism, Harris suggests that this strategy is
the best approach to the many puzzles of anthropology and
demonstrates how cultural materialism explains the endless
variety of cultural behavior--from female infanticide to to
the sacred cow, from North American Indian myths of the coyote
tot he marital customs of the aboriginal Australians--as the
adaptations of societies to their particular environments.
Harris's aim is to account for cultural evolution by the same
objective and scientific methods that Darwin used to explain
biological evolution and that Marx attempted to apply to
social evolution.
In formulating the principles of cultural materialism,
Harris analyzes and exposes the errors of his fellow
anthropologists, directing his argument at their
unscientific-- and often anti-scientific methods. These
alternative approaches, some merely faddish and others
intellectually fashionable, include Levi-Strauss's
structuralism, Freudian psychodynamics, humanistic idealism,
Wilson's sociobiology, dialectical materialism, structural
Marxism, Castaneda's mysticism, and aimless eclecticism--all
of which, according to Harris, deny in their own ways and to
varying degrees the foundations necessary for a science of
culture.
What Harris upholds is the scientific tradition, in which
cultural theory is balanced with a body of specific facts so
that theory and research inform--rather than determine-- each
other. One one level a compelling examination of
contemporary anthropology, this brilliant and original work is
also an essay on knowledge and the search for verifiable
truth. At a time when the Western tradition of
empiricism is widely denounced as bankrupt and the enormous
contributions of science disallowed, Harris argues
convincingly that these methods and achievements are far more
viable and constructive than the contemporary retreat into
radical relativism, escapist mysticism, and the despair of
knowledge itself. And whether one agrees or disagrees with
Harris, the fact is that this book will take its place at the
center of the most important intellectual controversy in
decades.
From the new (2001) edition: Cultural
Materialism, published in 1979, was Marvin Harris's first
full-length explication of the theory with which his work has
been associated. While Harris has developed and modified some
of his ideas over the past two decades, generations of
professors have looked to this volume as the essential
starting point for explaining the science of culture to
students. Now available again after a hiatus, this edition of
"Cultural Materialism" contains the complete text of the
original book plus a new introduction by Harris (with B.J.
Brown) that updates his ideas and examines the impact that the
book and theory have had on anthropological theorizing.
Contents:
Part I: Cultural Materialism as a Research Strategy
- Introduction to Part I
- Research Strategies and the Structure of
Science
- The Epistemology of Cultural Materialism
- Theoretical Principles of Cultural
Materialism
- The Scope of Cultural Materialist Theories
Part II: The Alternatives
- Introduction to Part II
- Sociobiology and Biological Reductionism
- Dialectical Materialism
- Structuralism
- Structural Marxism
- Psychological and Cognitive Idealism
- Eclecticism
- Obscurantism
- Bibliography
- Index
Theories of Culture in Postmodern
Times
Marvin Harris, 1998, California: AltaMira Press.
From the Publisher: Marvin Harris is arguably
the most influential, prolific anthropological theorist of our
time. This book brings together many of the strands of his
work of the past two decades into a unified, contemporary
statement on anthropological theory and practice. In this
book, he presents his current views on the nature of culture
addressing such issues as the mental/behavioral debate, emics
and etics, and anthropological holism. He resoundly critiques
many current theoretical trends--from sociobiology to
postmodernism to Afrocentrism. And he offers a cultural
materialist perspective on diverse contemporary issues such as
the IQ question and the fall of communism. Harris'
thought-provoking and controversial theoretical views will be
required reading for all anthropologists, social theorists,
and their students.
Contents:
Part I: Conceptualizing Culture
- What Is (Are) Culture(s)?
- Emics and Etics
- The Nature of Cultural Things
- Science, Objectivity, Morality
Part II: Biology and Culture
- De-Biologizing Culture: The Boasians
- Biologizing Inequality
- IQ Is Not Forever
- Neo-Darwinism
- Confronting Ethnomania
Part III:
Explanatory Principles
- Holism
- Cultural Materialism
- Postmodernism
Part IV:
Macroevolution
- Origins of Capitalism
- The Soviet Collapse
- References
- Index
Science, Materialism, and the Study of
Culture
Martin F. Murphy and Maxine L. Margolis (eds.), 1995,
Gainesville: University Press of Florida.
From the Publisher: "Well-argued, clearly
written essays by anthropologists committed to understanding
culture through theoretically grounded analysis of its
material underpinnings. The authors' impassioned call for an
anthropology that addresses pressing social
problems--exploitation, inequality, violence, hunger, and
underdevelopment--is a welcome counterweight to studies that
view power primarily as discourse or poetics."
--Marc Edelman, Hunter College and the Graduate Center,
CUNY
The social sciences, especially cultural anthropology, are
mired in contentious arguments about the desirability --even
the applicability--of scientific and causal principles in the
study of culture and society. The authors of these
essays come down clearly on the side and significance of these
principles, claiming that a cultural materialist approach is
the most productive way of explaining cultural differences and
similarities and of understanding many "unexplainable" aspects
of culture.
Contents:
- An Introduction to Cultural Materialism (Martin F.
Murphy and Maxine L. Margolis)
Part 1:
Theoretical Perspectives
- Explanation and Ground Truth: The Place of Cultural
Materialism in Scientific Anthropology (Allen
Johnson)
- Infrastructural Determinism (R. Brian
Feguson)
- Politics, Theory, and the Nature of Cultural Things
(Roger Sanjek)
- Anthropology and Postmodernism (Marvin
Harris)
Part 2: Applications
- Hunting Patterns and Village Fissioning among the
Yanomami: A Cultural Materialist Perspective (Kenneth
Good)
- Water Theft in Egypt's Fayoum Oasis: Emics, Etics,
and the Illegal (David H. Price)
- A Cultural Materialist Approach to the Causes of
Hunger and Homelessness in New York City (Anna Lou
Dehavenon)
- "We Are All Chickens for the Colonel": A Cultural
Materialist View of Prisons (Jagna Wojcicka
Sharff)
- Peasants, Projects, and Anthropological Models:
Fragile Causal Chains and Crooked Causal Arrows (Gerald F.
Murray)
- Bibliography
- Contributors
- Index
Macrosociology: An Introduction to
Human Societies
Stephen K. Sanderson, 1988, New York: Harper & Row,
Publishers (Currenlty in 4th editioin, 1998).
From Book News, Inc.: A general sociology text
written from a comparative, historical, and evolutionary
perspective. The most important changes in this updated
edition are a reworked discussion of the rise of modern
capitalism and revised and extended discussions of the recent
economic and political changes in the former Soviet Union and
Eastern Europe. Annotation copyright Book News, Inc. Portland,
Or.
Table of Contents 1
Sociology and the Scientific Study of Human Societies.
2 Biological Evolution and the Emergence of Human
Society and Culture. 3 Sociocultural Systems
and the Nature of Sociolocultural Evolution.
4 Preindustrial Societies. 5
Precapitalist Economic Systems. 6 The Origin
and Evolution of Social Stratification. 7 The
Origins of Modern Capitalism. 8 Capitalism
and Socialism Since the Industrial Revolution.
9 Capitalism and Economic Underdevelopment.
10 Social Stratification in Industrial
Societies. 11 Political Evolution and the
Origin of the State. 12 Capitalism,
Socialism, and the Evolution of the State. 13
Comparative Patterns of Racial and Ethnic
Stratification. 14 The Gender Division of
Labor and Gender Inequality. 15 Marriage,
Family, and Kinship in Comparative and Evolutionary
Perspective. 16 The Rise and Expansion of
Mass Education. 17 The Forms and Functions of
Religious Belief and Action. 18 Retospect and
Prospect: The Past 10,000 Years and the Next 100.
Social
Transformations
Stephen K. Sanderson, 1999, New York: Rowman &
Littlefield Publishing.
From the Publisher: In "Social Transformations:
A General Theory of Historical Development" Stephen K.
Sanderson develops a general theory of social evolution and
uses it to explain the most important evolutionary
transformations in human history and prehistory. In this
expanded edition Sanderson has added a discussion of the
biological constraints acting on humans that have helped to
push social evolution along strikingly similar lines
throughout the world. The new discussion places the
theoretical arguments of "Social Transformations" in the
context of an even more comprehensive theory of human social
behavior.
Table of Contents: Preface
Preface to the Expanded Edition 1
Evolutionary Materialism: A General Theory of Historical
Development The Theoretical Strategy of
Evolutionary Materialism Evolutionary
Materialism and World History 2 The Neolithic
Revolution Hunter--Gatherer Societies Before
10,000 BP The Worldwide Transition to
Agriculture Explaining the Worldwide Transition to
Agriculture Conclusions 3 The Origin of
Civilization and the State A Typology of
Sociopolitical Evolution The Origin of Civilization
and the State as a Process of Parallel Evolution
Explaining the Origin of Civilization and the State
The Pace of State Evolution Coda:Reconstructing
Social Evolution Using the Comparative Method
4 Agrarian States and their Evolutionary
Dynamics Social Change in Agrarian
States Agrarian States as Precapitalist
World-Systems Social Devolution and the Collapse of
Agrarian States Conclusion: The Evolutionary
Dynamics of Agrarian States 5 The Capitalist
Revolution and the Beginnings of the Modern World
Feudalism in World History The Nature of
Capitalism The Origins of European Capitalism
The Japanese Transition from Feudalism to
Capitalism Theories of the Transition to
Capitalism A New Interpretation 6 The
Evolution of the Modern World, I: The Expanding and Evolving
Modern World-System The Structure and Dynamics of the
Modern World-System The Evolution of the
Capitalist World-Economy, Hegemony in the
World-Economy Development and Underdevelopment in
the World-System Some Test Cases The
Interstate System: The Political Side of the Modern
World-System 7 The Evolution of the Modern World,
II: The Emergence of the Institutions of Modernity
Industrialization in the West and Japan The Rise
and Demise of State Socialism Stratification and
Mobility in the Age of Modernity The
Evolution of the Modern State The Emergence and
Expansion of Mass Education The Scientific
Revolution and the Development of Modern
Science The Emergence of a Postindustrial
Society? 8 The Question of Progress
Before the Rise of Modern Capitalism After the
Rise of Modern Capitalism Conclusions 9
The Evolving Future A Futuristic Scenario: W.
Warren Wagar The Challenges: Population Growth
and Ecological Degradation The Challenges:
Nuclear War The Challenges: A World State
The Challenges: Capitalism, Socialism, or Barbarism?
The Crisis and Collapse of Capitalist-Sensate
Culture 10 Theoretical Reprise Afterword
to the Expanded Edition: Biological Constraints on Social
Evolution References Index
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