Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies
Jared Diamond. W. W. Norton & Company, $27.5 (480pp) ISBN 978-0-393-03891-0
In a boldly ambitious analysis of history's broad patterns, evolutionary biologist Diamond (The Third Chimpanzee) identifies food production as a key to the glaring inequalities of wealth and power in the modern world. Dense, agriculture-based populations, unlike relatively egalitarian hunter-gatherers, bred chiefs, kings and bureaucratic ""kleptocracies"" that transferred wealth from commoners to upper classes. Such bureaucracies, Diamond maintains, were essential to organizing wars of conquest; moreover, farming societies were able to support full-time craft specialists who developed technical innovations and steel weapons. As a result, European conquerors and their colonizing descendants, bringing guns, cavalry and infectious diseases, overwhelmed the native peoples of North and South America, Africa and Australia. Using molecular biological studies, Diamond, a professor at UCLA Medical School, illuminates why Eurasian germs spreading animal-derived diseases proved so devastating to indigenous societies on other continents. Refuting racist explanations for presumed differences in intelligence or technological capability and eschewing a Eurocentric worldview, he argues persuasively that accidental differences in geography and environment, combined with centuries of conquest, genocide and epidemics, shaped the disparate populations of today's world. His masterful synthesis is a refreshingly unconventional history informed by anthropology, behavioral ecology, linguistics, epidemiology, archeology and technological development. Photos not seen by PW. BOMC, History Book Club, QPB and Newbridge Book Clubs selections. (Mar.)
Details
Reviewed on: 12/30/1996
Genre: Nonfiction
Compact Disc - 978-0-307-93242-6
Compact Disc - 978-1-4159-4296-3
Hardcover - 978-0-393-97386-0
Open Ebook - 528 pages - 978-0-393-06922-8
Paperback - 64 pages - 978-1-58663-863-4
Paperback - 496 pages - 978-0-393-31755-8