4.27 AVERAGE


dnf at 27 pc in ca mar-apr 2024 - seemed transparent/well balanced/engaging so far - may pick up again (just got distracted)
challenging informative inspiring slow-paced

Very interesting and an important read but at times painfully slow. I feel like it could be 200 pages shorter and still make its point just as well. 
adventurous informative reflective slow-paced
challenging informative fast-paced

Deserves all the praise it receives.

Only criticism is that it should be paired with a shorter, more accessible version of the key argument - and the text more clear on which key ideas correspond to each paragraph(s). But enough nitpicking, its relevance outweighs the rest.

Wikipedia provides a great summary: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Dawn_of_Everything

What stands out to me is how it demonstrates that most of our ideas on how human societies are organized are extremely biased towards the form that exists now - of states and hierarchy.
This book provides a revolutionary insight into possible pasts and possible futures where humans organize in egalitarian ways. It disproves that large scales require domination and stable social arrangements around fixed agricultural production. Another world is possible, a message sorely needed.

It leaves us with some possibilities of the key elements towards these better worlds: to consider three core freedoms, the freedom to move (away from toxic systems), the freedom to disobey ("") and the freedom to create new social arrangements; the implications of these freedoms could include the obligation to provide for the basic needs of anyone, so they can be free to be full human beings.
They also elaborate on how violence and domination are a current intrinsic part of our societal model - and how amerindian communities provide another way, one that doesn't shy away from violence, but doesn't confuse care and violence.

Clearly this is a book that needs to be studied in schools and that I'll need to reread to process further. So hope this is enticing enough for now.
challenging hopeful informative slow-paced

One of the best non fiction books I’ve ever read. Challenges some fundamental assumptions we’ve made about history and civilization. 
jennacrowder's profile picture

jennacrowder's review

5.0
adventurous challenging dark hopeful informative inspiring reflective medium-paced

viyh's review

3.75
informative medium-paced
hopeful informative slow-paced

I just finished Jared Diamond's Guns, Germs, and Steal so it was an interesting companion read. It does add some hope! 

Wirklich überragende Neuerzählung der Menschheitsgeschichte.