Chapter 1 List of Figures, Maps and Tables Chapter 2 Foreword by Joseph O. Vogel Chapter 3 Preface Chapter 4 Chapter 1: Monuments of the Past Chapter 5 Chapter 2: Human Landscapes Chapter 6 Chapter 3: Humans, Tool Makers Chapter 7 Chapter 4: Hunters, Gatherers, and a Social Universe Chapter 8 Chapter 5: The Emergence of the Hunter-Gatherer Chapter 9 Chapter 6: Microlithic Episodes Chapter 10 Chapter 7: Preludes to the Neolithic Chapter 11 Chapter 8: Twilight of the Hunterers-Gatherers Chapter 12 Appendix: Nelson Bay Cave, Lukenya Hill, and Kisio Rockshelter Chapter 13 Bibliography Chapter 14 Author Index Chapter 15 Subject Index Chapter 16 About the Author
Sibel Kusimba is an Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Lawrence University. She conducted dissertation fieldwork at Lukenya Hill and has, since 1996, been studying interactions between hunters and others in Kenya's Tsavo region with Chapurukha Kusimba of The Field Museum and Joseph Mworia of the National Museums of Kenya.
If modern humans originated in Africa, it is obvious that one
should look there to understand the fundamental processes involved.
Kusimba's book helps one to focus on the lifestyles and history of
African foragers in such a way that no one can escape the
implications of this basic truth.
*H-Africa*
African Foragers is a tour de force. Dr. Kusimba explores African
Foragers lifestyles with dedication, competence and clarity. In her
crystal-clear style, she paints in eight incisive chapters a
nuanced picture of Hunter-Gatherers research and spells out key
episodes of Foragers odyssey, mostly in Africa, but sometimes
beyond.
*Augustin F. C. Holl, University of Michigan*
Sibel Barut Kusimba's African Foragers will serve as an excellent
introductory text for students, not just for those working in
African archaeology but also beyond. This is a comprehensive,
up-to-date synthesis of outstanding research on the archaeology of
African hunter-gatherers.
*Peter Mitchell, St. Hugh's College, Oxford University*
The work is very well written, with a wealth of theoretical
argument that will be extremely useful for graduate seminars in
African Prehistory.
*H-Africa*
Kusimba presents a lucid, up-to-date review of the theoretical
underpinnings of the archaeological interpretation of
hunter-gatherers... the author interprets the later stone-age
archaeology of the region in light of these ideas and underscores
the dynamic and resilient value of the hunter-gatherer adaptation.
The result is a volume that will be essential in college and
university libraries...Essential.
*CHOICE*
Sibel Kusimba is one of a new generation of archaeologist who are
invigorating the study of African prehistory. African Foragers:
Environment, Technology, Interactions is an outstanding synthesis
of current research on the prehistory of African foragers from
earliest times through the Neolithic and into the colonial era.
Unlike older works focused on artifact typologies and culture
histories, Kusimba illustrates the ways in which environment,
technology, and interaction combine in process of cultural
adaptation. This process has created foraging societies that, on
the surface, appear remarkably stable over long periods of time but
which, when examined closely, are as dynamic as any other cultures
on earth. Kusimba's writing is clear, engaging, and unburdened with
jargon. Her examples are well-chosen and serve to illustrate both
the stability and dynamism in African foraging societies. African
Foragers is a rare example of a book that both students and
scholars will find useful, one that can be used both as a course
text and as a research source. It is sure to become a standard by
which future works on the prehistory of African foragers are
measured.
*Peter Peregrine, Lawrence University*
Kusimba's African Foragers is a clearly written undergraduate
textbook that highlights environment, technology, and social
interactions among ancient (and modern) African foragers.
*Technology and Culture*
This wide-ranging book explores ethnographic and archaeological
evidence related to foraging societies, with a focus on eastern and
southern Africa, in order to establish 'the hunting and gathering
of naturally occurring seasonal harvests' as a way of life all its
own, successful and long lived.
*Agricultural History*
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