The !Kung San: Men, Women and Work in a Foraging SocietyFor most of human history hunting and gathering was a universal way of life. Richard Borshay Lee spent over three years conducting fieldwork among the !Kung San, an isolated population of 1,000 in northern Botswana. When Lee began his work in 19863, the !Kung San were one of the last of the world's people to live this life. By 1973, when Lee last lived with the group, it appeared that they !Kung were a society on the threshold of a transformation that signalled the end of foraging as an independent way of life, at least in Africa. The !Kung San: Men, Women and Work in a Foraging Society, an ecological and historical study, is Professor Lee's major statement on his research. By maintaining simultaneous historical and synchronic perspectives, Lee is able to extend his analysis of core features from the contemporary !Kung to prehistoric societies. These basic principles become the means to understanding the form of human life that has been obscured by the developments and complications of societies during the last few thousand years. |
Contents
Fieldwork with the Kung | 8 |
a question | 29 |
its peoples and their history | 39 |
The environment | 87 |
Technology and the organization | 116 |
An inventory of plant resources | 158 |
The mongongo | 182 |
Hunting | 205 |
Ownership leadership and the use of space | 333 |
Conflict and violence | 370 |
Economic and social change in the 1960s | 401 |
The lessons of the Kung | 432 |
Appendix A Unraveling the Dobe population | 462 |
Mammals of the Dobe area | 474 |
a note | 489 |
| 495 | |
Other editions - View all
The !Kung San: Men, Women and Work in a Foraging Society Richard Borshay Lee No preview available - 1979 |
Common terms and phrases
Acacia adult Africa animal arrows Bantu Basarwa birth interval birth spacing Botswana carrying cattle posts Chapter child Chum!kwe core cracking diet Dipcadi Dobe area Dobe camp dogs Du/da area dunes eaten ecological edible females fieldwork fight Figure fire foraging fruit Gausha gemsbok Ghanzi district Goshe Grewia groves headman herd Herero homicide hunter hunter-gatherers hunting and gathering Kalahari Kangwa kaross killed Kubi kudu Kung San land living groups Mahopa major male Marshall Maun meat mode of production molapo mongongo mongongo nuts months n!ore Namibia Nyae Nyae observed percent period plant poison population rainfall residents root season Setswana siblings skinfold thickness snares social society South African spear species springhare steenbok subsistence Table tion To//gana Toma Toma//gwe Total trees trip tsin Tswana uniformitarian vegetable warthog water hole weight woman Xai/xai young



