There's a real interest in that period from tat kind of, let's say, 33 hundred to a round 25 hundred. In starting to look like your neighbors, even if you're not living life the same way. And again, get this idea hat there's a real importance in kind of getting along. We can create fictive kin if we need im.
Catherine Frieman, an associate professor of European Archaeology at the School of Archaeology, talks about her recent book, An Archaeology of Innovation: Approaching Social and Technological Change in Human Society, with Peoples & Things host, Lee Vinsel. Her book offers a long-term perspective on innovation that only archaeology can offer and draws on case studies from across human history, from our earliest hominin ancestors to the present. The book makes several different arguments, but one of them is that our present narrow focus on pushing the adoption of technical innovations—especially so called “disruptive innovations”—ignores the complex social, technological, and environmental systems that undergirds successful societies.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices