Muscular Bonding Human Evolution Small Communities Religious Ceremonies Politics and War Conclusion Notes Index
William H. McNeill is Professor of History, Emeritus, University of Chicago and author of, among other books, The Rise of the West, which won the National Book Award in 1964, and Plagues and Peoples.
In his imaginative and provocative book...William H. McNeill
develops an unconventional notion that, he observes, is 'simplicity
itself.' He maintains that people who move together to the same
beat tend to bond and thus that communal dance and drill alter
human feelings. -- John Mueller * New York Times Book Review *
Every now and then, a slender, graceful, unassuming little volume
modestly proposes a radical rethinking of human history. Such a
book is Keeping Together in Time...Important, witty, and
thoroughly approachable, [it] could, perhaps, only be written by a
scholar in retirement with a lifetime's interdisciplinary reading
to ponder, the imagination to conceive unanswerable questions, and
the courage, in this age of over-speculation, to speculate in areas
where certainty is impossible. Its vision of dance as a shaper of
evolution, a perpetually sustainable and sustaining resource, would
crown anyone's career. -- Penelope Reed Doob * Toronto Globe and
Mail *
McNeill is one of our greatest living historians...As usual with
McNeill, Keeping Together in Time contains a wonderfully
broad survey of practices in other times and places. There are the
Greeks, who invented the flute-accompanied phalanx, and the Romans,
who invented calling cadence while marching. There are the Shakers,
who combined worship and dancing, and the Mormons, who carefully
separated the functions but who prospered at least as much on the
strength of their dancing as their Sunday morning worship. -- David
Warsh * Boston Sunday Globe *
[A] wide-ranging and thought-provoking book...A mind-stretching
exploration of the thesis that `keeping together in time'--army
drill, village dances, and the like--consolidates group solidarity
by making us feel good about ourselves and the group and thus was
critical for social cohesion and group survival in the past. *
Virginia Quarterly Review *
[This book is] nothing less than a survey of the historical impact
of shared rhythmic motion from the paleolithic to the present, an
impact that [McNeill] finds surprisingly significant...McNeill
moves beyond Durkheim in noting that in complex societies divided
by social class muscular bonding may be the medium through which
discontented and oppressed groups can gain the solidarity necessary
for challenging the existing social order. -- Robert N. Bellah *
Commonweal *
The title of this fascinating essay contains a pun that sums up its
thesis" keeping together in time, or coordinated rhythmic movement
and the shared feelings it evokes, has kept human groups together
throughout history. Most of McNeill's pioneering study is devoted
to the history of communal dancing...[This] volume will appeal
equally to scholars and to the general reader. -- Doyne Dawson *
Military History *
As with so many themes [like this one], whether in science or in
symphonies, one wonders (in retrospect) why it has not been
invented before...[T]he book is fascinating. -- K. Kortmulder *
Acta Biotheoretica (The Netherlands) *
This scholarly and creative exploration of the largely unresearched
phenomenon of shared euphoria aroused by unison movement moves
across the disciplines of dance, history, sociology, and
psychology...Highly recommended. * Choice *
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