The Warden illlustrated by  Bill Bragg For Sale
The Warden illlustrated by Bill Bragg
Trollope, Anthony
Click to view details

Folio Society Published Works Number 2811

Renfrew, Colin - Prehistory The Making of the Human Mind

We buy and sell items like these, so please contact us if you have similar items for sale, and we will make you an offer if we are interested.

To check if we have this item, or similar items, in stock, please click the Check Stock link below. Alternatively, use the links on the left to search our large online database of items for sale, or to visit the rest of the site.

Check Stock

Renfrew, Colin - Prehistory The Making of the Human Mind (Published in by The Folio Society in 2013. Introduced by Professor Alice Roberts. Bound in cloth. Set in Sabon. 264 pages. Frontispiece. 24 pages of colour and black & white plates. Book size: 9.5" x 6.25". Defined as the span of our time on Earth before written records, prehistory covers most of human existence. In this concise study, Colin Renfrew presents us with a brilliant overview of his discipline. Two centuries ago the notion of prehistory did not exist: many European scholars believed, following Biblical calculations, that the Earth was created in 4004 BC. In the first half of this work, Renfrew shows how this belief was gradually overturned by archaeology, geology and, of course, Darwinism in the 19th century, and the radiocarbon 'revolution' in the 20th. The second half examines prehistory itself, and the problems and issues that confront the discipline today. Foremost of these is the sapient paradox – in other words, the huge time lag between the emergence of Homo sapiens over 150,000 years ago and the appearance of the first civilisations tens of millennia later. In trying to solve this puzzle, Renfrew points to the importance of a cognitive archaeology that aims to trace the development of the human mind. Through this, we can understand more clearly the great milestones in the human journey. Described by the New Scientist as 'a towering influence in archaeology', Professor Renfrew is a Senior Fellow in archaeology at the McDonald Institute at Cambridge University. In her introduction Professor Alice Roberts, anthropologist and paleopathologist, describes Renfrew's view of prehistoric archaeology as an 'intellectual adventure'. This edition contains a rich selection of outstanding images: aerial photography of early settlements in the Americas, a bronze vessel from the Shang dynasty of China and perhaps the earliest-known human portrait: a figure modelled in lime plaster from Jordan, c. 7200 BC. The binding features a design based on 'River Avon Mud Hand Circles' by Richard Long, one of Britain's leading contemporary artists, reproduced here by his kind permission. )

[Back to top]

Useful Links

Home Page
Links
Contact Us
Blog

Information

Terms and conditions
Delivery information
About Ardis Books

Policies

Returns policy
Cancellation policy

Contact

Customer services
Email Ardis Books
What our customers say