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Working Donkeys in 4th-3rd Millennium BC Mesopotamia - Insights from Modern Development Studies (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,203
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Working Donkeys in 4th-3rd Millennium BC Mesopotamia - Insights from Modern Development Studies (Paperback)
Series: UCL Institute of Archaeology Publications
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Working Donkeys in 4th-3rd Millennium BC Mesopotamia: Insights from
Modern Development Studies is a reassessment of the role and impact
of working-animal adoption in antiquity, focusing on 4th-3rd
millennium BC Mesopotamia but applicable to other periods and
regions. This book is driven by a novel interdisciplinary process
of analogy with modern use of working donkeys and cattle in
sub-Saharan Africa and elsewhere. The author uses close qualitative
analysis of nearly 400 published official and NGO development
studies of the complex practicalities of adoption of working
animals in developing regions worldwide, in particular of the
invisible and under-appreciated donkey. This material, little-used
as yet in Ancient Near Eastern archaeology, sheds light on the
day-to-day practicalities of working-animal adoption and management
- breeding, training, husbandry, hiring and lending. While
archaeology will always have need of large-scale anthropological
models, the author argues for a parallel bottom-up ethological
approach, envisaging the 4th and 3rd millennia BC in Mesopotamia
from a viewpoint explicitly acknowledging the major presence of
working animals and their daily impact on human activity and the
consequent archaeological record. This innovatory investigation of
the role and impact of the donkey in the Ancient Near East and
today is an essential handbook for Ancient Near Eastern archaeology
and zooarchaeology researchers and students, as well as historians,
anthropologists and ethnographers examining the impact of working
animals on past and present societies. Wider audiences include the
growing sector of human-animal relationship studies, and NGOs
concerned with the use of working donkeys worldwide.
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