As our world becomes increasingly permeable, and as human populations are rapidly converging and transitioning within a global interconnectedness, it is vital that we look to, and learn from, those most adept at the adaptation, creation, and contesting of culture: adolescents. This text is designed
Hunter-Gatherer Childhoods: Evolutionary, Developmental, and Cultural Perspectives
β Scribed by Barry S. Hewlett
- Publisher
- Routledge
- Year
- 2005
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 484
- Series
- Evolutionary Foundations of Human Behavior Series
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
In the vast anthropological literature devoted to hunter-gatherer societies, surprisingly little attention has been paid to the place of hunter-gatherer children. Children often represent 40 percent of hunter-gatherer populations, thus nearly half the population is omitted from most hunter-gatherer ethnographies and research. This volume is designed to bridge the gap in our understanding of the daily lives, knowledge, and development of hunter-gatherer children.
The twenty-six contributors to Hunter-Gatherer Childhoods use three general but complementary theoretical approaches--evolutionary, developmental, cultural--in their presentations of new and insightful ethnographic data. For instance, the authors employ these theoretical orientations to provide the first systematic studies of hunter-gatherer children's hunting, play, infant care by children, weaning and expressions of grief. The chapters focus on understanding the daily life experiences of children, and their views and feelings about their lives and cultural change. Chapters address some of the following questions: why does childhood exist, who cares for hunter-gatherer children, what are the characteristic features of hunter-gatherer children's development and what are the impacts of culture change on hunter-gatherer child care?
The book is divided into five parts. The first section provides historical, theoretical and conceptual framework for the volume; the second section examines data to test competing hypotheses regarding why childhood is particularly long in humans; the third section expands on the second section by looking at who cares for hunter-gatherer children; the fourth section explores several developmental issues such as weaning, play and loss of loved ones; and, the final section examines the impact of sedentism and schools on hunter-gatherer children.
This pioneering volume will help to stimulate further research and scholarship on hunter-gatherer childhoods, thereby advancing our understanding of the way of life that characterized most of human history and of the processes that may have shaped both human development and human evolution.
β¦ Table of Contents
Cover
Half Title
Title Page
Copyright Page
Contents
Acknowledgments
Preface
Contributors
I: THEORETICAL AND CONCEPTUAL ISSUES
1 Emerging Issues in the Study of Hunter-Gatherer Children
2 Hunter-Gatherer Infancy and Childhood: The ΓKung and Others
3 Comes the Child before Man: How Cooperative Breeding and Prolonged Postweaning Dependence Shaped Human Potential
4 Studying Children in Hunter-Gatherer" Societies: Reflections from a Nay aka Perspective
II: WHY DOES CHILDHOOD EXIST?
Introduction
5 What Makes a Competent Adult Forager?
6 Martu Children's Hunting Strategies in the Western Desert, Australia
7 Growing Up Mikea: Children's Time Allocation and Tuber Foraging in Southwestern Madagascar
III: WHO CARES FOR HUNTER-GATHERER CHILDREN?
Introduction
8 Who Tends Hadza Children?
9 Child Caretakers Among Efe Foragers of the Ituri Forest
10 Older Hadza Meri and Women as Helpers: Residence Data
11 Juvenile Responses to Household Ecology Among the Yora of Peruvian Amazonia
12 The Growth and Kinship Resources of Ju/'hoansi Children
IV: SOCIAL, EMOTIONAL, COGNITIVE, AND MOTOR DEVELOPMENT
Introduction
13 Mother-Infant Interactions among the !Xun: Analysis of Gymnastic and Breastfeeding Behaviors
14 Weanling Emotional Patterns among the Bofi Foragers of Central Africa: The Role of Maternal Availability and Sensitivity
15 Vulnerable Lives: The Experience of Death and Loss among the Aka and Ngandu Adolescents of the Central African Republic
16 Play among Baka Children in Cameroon
V: CULTURE CHANGE AND FUTURE RESEARCH
Introduction
17 Infant Care among the Sedentarized Baka Hunter-Gatherers in Southeastern Cameroon
18 Deforesting among Andamanese Children: Political Economy and History of Schooling
19 Reflections on Hunter-Gatherer Childhoods
References
Index
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p><p>This is the first book to examine social learning and innovation in hunterβgatherers from around the world. More is known about social learning in chimpanzees and nonhuman primates than is known about social learning in hunterβgatherers, a way of life that characterized most of human history.
<p><p>Hunter-gatherer research has played a historically central role in the development of anthropological and evolutionary theory. Today, research in this traditional and enduringly vital field blurs lines of distinction between archaeology and ethnology, and seeks instead to develop perspectives
In this interdisciplinary collection of lectures, Chris Sinha presents a uniquely cultural, developmental and evolutionary approach to cognitive linguistics. Topics range from language in children's play, through cultural conceptualizations of time, to philosophical and linguistic relativism.