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The Origin of Civilization

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The Origin of Civilization

Written by: Scott MacEachern, The Great Courses
Narrated by: Scott MacEachern
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About this listen

What defines a civilization? How did the first states emerge? How were the world's ancient states similar and different? Answer these and other dramatic questions with this grand 48-lecture course that reveals how human beings around the world transitioned from small farming communities to the impressive cultural and political systems that would alter the course of history.

Taking a gripping archaeological and historical approach to formative states such as the ancient Egyptians, the Chinese, and the Maya, Professor MacEachern completes your understanding of the history of civilization by exploring it at its earliest stages. Unlike traditional surveys of ancient civilizations, which tend to focus only on the glorious achievements of these cultures, you'll look at those first all-important steps that the world's first civilizations would take on the road to glory.

You'll investigate places such as Mesopotamia, where agriculture laid the foundation for groundbreaking experiments in social and political development in places like Uruk and Sumer; the eastern Mediterranean, where expanding maritime trade during the Bronze Age increasingly knit the different societies of these islands into a web of political and economic relationships; and Mesoamerica, where the indigenous states in and around what are now Mexico, Honduras, and Nicaragua reveal the full flowering of Olmec and Maya civilization.

You'll also take an engaging look at what archaeologists have learned from some of the world's oldest and most intriguing sites. In the end, these lectures will leave you awestruck at the diverse ways that ancient people crafted complex systems - systems whose broad strokes remain with us even today.

©2010 The Teaching Company, LLC (P)2010 The Great Courses
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    3 out of 5 stars
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Not up to the standard I expect from TGC

Easily the worst of the Great Courses I have listened to thus far. The instructor seems more interested in impressing the listener than with teaching anything, and the material is meandering and unfocused. The actual spoken delivery also doesn’t do this course any favours. It’s halting, sloppy and annoying. I have a suspicion that there are other Great Courses that do this topic better justice.

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  • Overall
    2 out of 5 stars

Origin of states, not civilization

Title is weirdly click bait. Professor quickly announces that it's really about the origin of states because the word civilization is problematic. If you learned civilization is marked by continuous settlement on land under continuous cultivation by groups larger than family scale, and want to learn more about how that transition occurred this course will be of no help at all. It starts with the assumption that has already happened pursues issues of statehood. Apparently the shift from nomadic hunter-gatherers to settled communities dependent on cooperation among different family groups is too uninteresting to warrant study.

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