Au commencement était...

Une nouvelle histoire de l'humanité

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David Graeber, David Graeber, David Wengrow: Au commencement était... (French language, 2023, Les Liens Qui Libèrent)

752 pages

French language

Published Jan. 6, 2023 by Les Liens Qui Libèrent.

ISBN:
979-10-209-2463-6
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5 stars (4 reviews)

David Graeber et David Wengrow se sont donné pour objectif de « jeter les bases d’une nouvelle histoire du monde ». Le temps d’un voyage fascinant, ils nous invitent à nous débarrasser de notre carcan conceptuel pour comprendre quelles sociétés nos ancêtres cherchaient à créer. Foisonnant d’érudition, s’appuyant sur des recherches novatrices, leur ouvrage dévoile un passé humain infiniment plus intéressant que ne le suggèrent les lectures conventionnelles. Un livre monumental d’une extraordinaire portée intellectuelle dont vous ne sortirez pas indemne et qui bouleversera à jamais votre perception de l’histoire humaine.

12 editions

Extraordinary in its Scope!

5 stars

Happy birthday to David Graeber! - 02/12/2025 I found The Dawn of Everything absolutely fascinating. The authors explain so much about the economy, the state, and their intersection over a vast span of time. They chart a history of humanity from a time of relative freedom to the current era. It's obvious that a lot of research, thought, and analysis went into this book. It was obviously a labor of love for its authors and well worth a read if you've ever wondered, "why is the state?".

Comprehensive and Challenging

5 stars

The archeological rigor and discovery explained in this book do indeed shed new light on our arrogant and foreordained conceptions of prehistory and the development and status of what has become known as "civilization." I have always found the notion of near-instantaneous "revolutions," whether agriculture, industrial, or computer, to be inherently questionable (and most often preceded by a blizzard of trial and error and half-steps and experimentation over centuries). I find it much easier to believe in an ebb, neap, and rip tide of different intellectual and cultural phenomena and traditions (moving into and back from the cultural shore that it changes) to be a more likely scenario. The new archeology would appear to support such a story.

If I have a misgiving about this book, it is the authors' sharp tongue for what amounts to enlightenment political philosophers who, while they may have had their views of the nature …