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Hunting and gathering as a way of life FOH 1-3, Cambridge Encyclopedia, April 22.

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Presentation on theme: "Hunting and gathering as a way of life FOH 1-3, Cambridge Encyclopedia, April 22."— Presentation transcript:

1 Hunting and gathering as a way of life FOH 1-3, Cambridge Encyclopedia, April 22

2 Four stages in the development of human societies?

3 Hunting and gathering Agriculture Preindustrial civilization Industrial / modern society

4 Four stages in the development of human societies? Hunting and gathering (until c. 8000 BCE) Agriculture (c. 8000 – 3000 BCE) Preindustrial civilization (c. 3000 BCE – 1750 CE) Industrial / modern society (c. 1750 CE ff)

5 Hunting and gathering (= foraging) How do people sustain themselves? How do they relate to each other?

6 Sustaining themselves?

7 Gathering wild plants, fruits, tubers, seeds, nuts eggs, honey, fish, small animals (lizards, etc.)  importance to diet?  who does it? why?  how much each day?

8 Hunting large animals (deer, mammoth, bison, etc.), small game (rabbits, birds), fish for meat, skins, bones, feathers, etc.  importance to diet?  who does it? why?  how much each day?

9 Division of labor by gender and age Has to do more with traits of human infants

10 Division of labor by gender and age Has to do more with traits of human infants than with inherent abilities of adults: – Dependent on breast milk – Noisy – Cannot walk (fast/far) Women of childbearing age and anyone who cannot be quiet and travel far gathers foods

11 Nomadic = not permanently settled, moving from place to place Why? What does this mean for how they live, what they acquire and store? Surplus?

12 Surplus = anything of value beyond what is needed for day to day survival What form would it take in H & G societies?

13 Orientation to work and natural world Gathering and hunting until daily needs are met Natural world as source of all good things Access to land/water is usually shared by a group or open to all (not “private property”)

14 How do they relate to each other? Live in bands = small groups of 15-50 people related by kinship – Relationships of partners, parent/child, siblings exist within those groups Bands may disperse and come together over year – as sustenance needs fluctuate

15 How do they relate to each other? Egalitarian?

16 How do they relate to each other? Egalitarian = treating each other as equals – Leadership “by example, not fiat” – People may “vote with their feet” – Equal value attached to gathering and hunting – Minimal surplus, little/no private property

17 How do they relate to each other? Egalitarian Reciprocity/sharing = idea that people should give to each other without expecting anything in return immediately – Sharing of food – Sharing of responsibilities – Cooperative endeavors

18 Hunting and gathering societies How do they live? – Subsistence through natural world – Nomadic – Little/no surplus How do they relate? – Bands – Egalitarian – Sharing

19 How do they relate to each other? Egalitarian Reciprocity/sharing?

20 Questions about H & G societies?


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