Image for What makes civilization?  : the ancient near East and the future of the West

What makes civilization? : the ancient near East and the future of the West

See all formats and editions

The targeted destruction of ancient sites and monuments in the Middle East provokes widespread outrage in the West.

But what is our connection to the ancient Near East?

In this updated edition of What Makes Civilization? archaeologist David Wengrow investigates the origins of farming, writing, and cities in ancient Mesopotamia (Iraq) and Egypt, and explores the connections between these two civilizations.

It is the story of how people first created kingdoms and monuments to the gods and, just as importantly, how they pioneered everyday practices that we might now take for granted, such as familiar ways of cooking food and keeping the house and body clean.

Wengrow asks why these ancient cultures, where so many features of modern life originated, have come to symbolize the remote and the exotic.

Today, perhaps more than ever, he argues, the beleaguered cultural heritage of ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia stands as a warning for the future.

A warning of the sacrifices people will tolerate to preserve their chosen form of life; of the potential for unfettered expansion that exists within any cultural tradition; and of blood perhaps yet to be spilled, on the altar of a misguided notion of civilization.

Read More
Available
£10.49 Save 25.00%
RRP £13.99
Add Line Customisation
6 in stock Need More ?
Add to List
Product Details
Oxford University Press
0199699429 / 9780199699421
Hardback
932.01
25/01/2018
United Kingdom
English
240 p. : ill., maps
20 cm
Reprint. Originally published: 2010.