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Ethnolinguistic Prehistory: The Peopling of the World from the Perspective of Language, Genes and Material Culture: Brill's Tibetan Studies Library / Languages of the Greater Himalayan Region, cartea 26

Autor George L. van Driem
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 21 apr 2021
This volume provides the most up-to-date and holistic but compact account of the peopling of the world from the perspective of language, genes and material culture, presenting a view from the Himalayas. The phylogeny of language families, the chronology of branching of linguistic family trees and the historical and modern geographical distribution of language communities inform us about the spread of languages and linguistic phyla. The global distribution and the chronology of spread of Y chromosomal haplogroups appears closely correlated with the spread of language families. New findings on ancient DNA have greatly enhanced our understanding of the prehistory and provenance of our biological ancestors. The archaeological study of past material cultures provides yet a third independent window onto the complex prehistory of our species.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789004448360
ISBN-10: 9004448365
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.95 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Brill's Tibetan Studies Library / Languages of the Greater Himalayan Region


Cuprins

Preface
List of Figures

Part 1 Historical Contexts in Which We Live



1 Prehistory and the Present
Crossing National and Mythical Boundaries
1European Identities
2A Tablet of Unusual Composition
3A Pieterskerk Skull Migrates to Switzerland
4Migration and Population Replacement in Prehistoric Europe

2 Evolving Scientific Views of Our Origins
As Opposed to Political Projections upon the Prehistoric Past
1Recent History Can Distort Our Perception of Prehistory
2Indigenism in India
3The Aryan Invasion and the Ancient Indian Fatherland
4Colonial Expansion out of India and into India
5The Zeal of Jihād and Reconquista Are Brought to the Subcontinent
6The Continuing Saga of Colonialism

3 A Fascination with Phenotypical Diversity
The Manifold Ways in Which We Humans Can Look Beautiful
1The Rise of Race
2Enchanted by Human Phenotypical Diversity
3The Slippery Slope from Physical Anthropology to Racism
4A Molecular Understanding of Heredity and the Fallacy of Race
5The Tenacity of Obsolete Labels and the Rise of New Fictions
6Endogamy and Exclusion vs. Conquest and Élite Dominance
7Decolonising East Asian Prehistory

4 Chinoiserie Old and New
Language Typology with and without Racial Prejudice
1Spellbound by Language Typology
2Racist Linguistic Typology vs. Linguistic Relativity
3Ex Occidente Lux
4The Creoloid Origins of Chinese
5Asian Negrito Populations and the Birth of Lexicostatistics
6Lexicostatistics under the Novel Guise of ‘Phylolinguistics’

Part 2 Episodes of Our Shared Prehistory



5 Beyond the Linguistic Event Horizon
The sub-Himalayan Hill Tracts and Adjacent Plains Serve as a Conduit
1The Rapacious Species
2The Colonisation of Eurasia
3Mixing with the Neighbours
4Walking the Dogs Back to Africa
5Long Lost Cousins
6Eastward through the Clement Climatic Corridor
7Yet Another Wave Washes through the Subcontinent
8Human Paternal Lineages as Molecular Tracers
9Paternal Starburst in the Subcontinent
10Subsequent South Asian Y-Chromosomal Starbursts

6 Holocene Dispersals
Genetic Correlates of Major Linguistic Phyla in Eastern Eurasia
1From the Himalayan Heartland to Hyperborea
2Austro-Tai Comprises Austronesian and Kradai
3Older Layers of Peopling Shine through
4Austroasiatic and para-Austroasiatic
5Trans-Himalayan and Yangtzean

7 From India to Europe and Back
From the Holocene to the Beginnings of Recorded History
1Dene-Kusunda and beyond Beringia
2Burushaski and Indo-European
3The Discovery of the Indus Civilisation
4The Dravidians and the Indus Civilisation
5Nihali and Vedda
6Crossing the Pacific with Coconuts and Sweet Potatoes
7The Discovery of America
8Meanderings in the Pacific and Indian Oceans
9Ancient Culture on the Beautiful Maldives
10As Bassas de Chagas
11Epilogue

Bibliography
Index

Notă biografică

George van Driem, Ph.D. (1987), Leiden University, holds the Chair of Historical Linguistics at the University of Bern in Switzerland. He has published several grammars of previously undescribed Himalayan languages and authored The Tale of Tea (Brill, 2019).