Cover: Primeval Kinship: How Pair-Bonding Gave Birth to Human Society, from Harvard University PressCover: Primeval Kinship in PAPERBACK

Primeval Kinship

How Pair-Bonding Gave Birth to Human Society

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Book Details

PAPERBACK

$24.00 • £17.95 • €21.60

ISBN 9780674046412

Publication: March 2010

Text

368 pages

6-1/8 x 9-1/4 inches

17 line illustrations

World

Bernard Chapais offers a powerful and controversial new account of hominid origins… His book offers us one more scenario of our human trajectory… Chapais‘ thesis urges us to consider very carefully why humans are so different.—Monique Borgerhoff Mulder, Nature

Chapais has written a bold, new book that promises nothing less than the unveiling of the original, earliest form of human society and an account of how it developed over evolutionary time. The book indeed fulfills this promise, presenting a persuasive, well-argued, logical evolutionary scenario based on empirical data and a sound comparative method… Primeval Kinship presents powerful arguments concerning the origin and evolutionary path of human kinship. It reopens old questions, long abandoned, about the origins of human society, and addresses them with a brilliant synthesis of recent primate data. Chapais has demonstrated that primatology is now positioned to make significant contributions to the study of human kinship. This work will undoubtedly open further debate and inspire further research. It effectively dispels the view that human kinship is a purely cultural construction or that kinship can be understood outside the framework of our primate legacy.—Linda Stone, Evolutionary Psychology

Primeval Kinship represents a bold effort to integrate two wildly disparate disciplines, primatology and cultural anthropology, to understand long-standing questions about the evolution of human society. With an increasing tendency toward specialization in science, there are few who dare step outside of their comfort zones to attempt broad, wide-ranging syntheses on problems that go to the heart of what it is to be human. In this regard, Chapais should be lauded for his labors and for an extremely stimulating read. His reasoned and careful treatment of the primate data provides considerable food for thought about how and why we have come to be the way we are.—John C. Mitani, Primates

Primeval Kinship is a treasure chest of comparative research on human and primate social structure, organization, and behavior. This book will reignite and reinvigorate discussions of the evolution of primate and human society. It will be a model from which future social and physical anthropologists, primatologists, and social scientists can build.—Robert Wald Sussman, Professor of Anthropology and Environmental Sciences, Washington University in St. Louis

Awards

  • 2010 W.W. Howells Book Prize, Biological Anthropology Section of the American Anthropological Association
  • Honorable Mention, 2008 Association of American Publishers PROSE Award, Biological Sciences Category
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