Jack Goody sets his own observations on cooking in West Africa. He criticizes those approaches which overlook the comparative historical dimension of culinary, and other, cultural differences that emerge in class societies, both of which elements he particularly emphasizes in this book.[...]
This book assesses the impact of writing on human societies, both in the Ancient Near East and in contemporary Africa, and highlights some general features of social systems that have been influenced by this major change in the mode of communication. Such features are central to any attempt at the t[...]
The East in the West reassesses Western views of Asia. Traditionally many European historians and theorists have seen the societies of the East as ?static? or ?backward?. Jack Goody challenges these assumptions, beginning with the notion of a special Western rationality which enabled ?us? and not ?t[...]
This is a concise, yet wide--ranging, history of the family in Europe from antiquity to the present day.[...]
A landmark exploration of the role of metals across Europe and Asia from the Bronze Age to the Industrial Revolution.[...]
In The Theft of History Jack Goody builds on his own previous work to extend further his highly influential critique of what he sees as the pervasive Eurocentric or occidentalist biases of so much western historical writing and the consequent 'theft' by the West of the achievements of other cultures[...]
The importance of writing as a means of communication in a society formerly without it, or where writing has been confined to particular groups, is enormous. It objectifies speech, provides language with a material correlative, and in this material form speech can be transmitted over space and prese[...]