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Loading... The Invention of Yesterday: A 50,000-Year History of Human Culture, Conflict, and Connection (original 2019; edition 2019)by Tamim Ansary (Author)
Work InformationThe Invention of Yesterday: A 50,000-Year History of Human Culture, Conflict, and Connection by Tamim Ansary (2019)
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. This was a fantastic narrative of human history starting from the beginning of human civilization until now. What Tamim Ansary does that is different than most history books is rather than tell history from a single part of the world, he tells it with a global perspective and shows how the sequence of events that are happening in one part of the world impact another region all the way across the globe. It's such a novel way to look at our history and I discovered many gems of information. He also has a light and humorous style that makes this feel more like a story than a history lesson. Excellent non-fiction! Like the butterfly effect, what happened in China affected what happened in Rome; what the Vikings did affected the world. No culture is ‘pure’; every nation has been changed by others. We are all interconnected; progress does not take place in a vacuum. The average world history book aimed at the English speaking world tends to start with the Fertile Crescent, give a fair bit of time to the Greeks and Romans, and then go straight to Western Europe for the rest of the book, with some time spent on North and South America. Ansary looks beyond those, and focuses mainly on connections. The far flung Roman Empire put many different cultures and religions in touch with each other, as did the Vikings, and then the Crusades. When Columbus discovered the Americas, a whole new world of cultures, foods, animals, and inventions collided and merged. The advent of factory work changed how the world worked, as much or more than the transistor did. Communications and management changed the world as much as armies and navies did. The book reminded me of “Guns, Germs, and Steel” in the way the author looked at things other than kings and armies as forces that shaped our civilization. Ansary is a bit more casually written, at times drifting into slang, but the thinking and writing is solid. I enjoyed this book a lot, and it taught me things I’d not thought of before. Excellent Big Picture history that is as insightful and eye-opening and well-written as Sapiens by Harari. Makes an excellent companion volume to that work. I would have preferred annotation and documentation, especially given some of the generalizations that no doubt have challengers. I had the same issue with Harari's book. Other than that caveat, highly recommended. no reviews | add a review
"A sweeping global human history that describes the separate beginnings of the world's major civilizations and cultural movements -- Confuscianism, Islam, Judeo-Christianity, Hinduism, Buddhism and Nomadism -- and the dramatic, sometimes ruinous, sometimes transformative effects of their ever closer intertwinement that has brought us to where we are today"-- No library descriptions found. |
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A typical example at a small scale: how can I take anything seriously about the ancient Greeks from a writer who says that Achilles had a human mother and a divine father? Can one possibly even have skimmed the Iliad without knowing who Thetis is, or be accepted as speaking with any authority about Archaic Greece who has not? (And his historical treatment of Archaic Greece is grossly oversimplified and inaccurate.)
The author's history of the ancient middle East is naive at best; his treatment of Classical Rome and the rise of Christianity poorly informed.
I could continue the list but have not the patience to do so; the energy is too great for the end involved. ( )