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The Egalitarians - Human and Chimpanzee

The Egalitarians - Human and Chimpanzee

The Egalitarians - Human and Chimpanzee

An Anthropological View of Social Organization
Margaret Power, Simon Fraser University, British Columbia
August 2005
Available
Paperback
9780521018265

    This innovative book challenges the perceived view, based largely on long observation of artificially-fed chimpanzees in Gombe and Mahale National Parks, Tanzania, of the typical social behaviour of chimpanzees as aggressive, dominance seeking, and fiercely territorial. In polar opposition, all reports from naturalistic (non-feeding) field studies are of non-aggressive chimpanzees living peacefully in non-hierarchical groups, on home ranges open to all. These reports have been ignored and downgraded by most of the scientific community. By utilising the data from these studies the author is able to construct a model of an egalitarian form of social organisation, based on a fluid role relationship of mutual dependence between many charismatic chimpanzees of both sexes and other more dependent members. This highly and necessarily positive mutual dependence system is characteristic of both (undisturbed) chimpanzees and (undisturbed) humans who live by the 'immediate-return' foraging system.

    Product details

    November 1991
    Hardback
    9780521400169
    312 pages
    236 × 158 × 21 mm
    0.57kg
    8 b/w illus. 2 tables
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Foreword A. Montagu
    • Acknowledgements
    • Part I. Methods and Prefatory Explanations
    • Part II. The Human Foragers
    • Part III. The Changing Social Order
    • Part IV. The Behaviour of Wild and Provisioned Groups: A Theoretical Analysis
    • Part V. The Mutual Dependence System
    • Part VI. The Egalitarian Chimpanzees
    • Part VII. Probabilities, Possibilities and Half-Heard Whispers
    • Notes
    • References
    • Index.
      Contributors
    • A. Montagu

    • Author
    • Margaret Power , Simon Fraser University, British Columbia