The World Until Yesterday

2012 popular science book by Jared Diamond From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The World Until Yesterday: What Can We Learn from Traditional Societies? is a 2012 popular science book by Jared Diamond. It explores what people living in the Western world can learn from traditional societies, including differing approaches to conflict resolution, treatment of the elderly, childcare, the benefits of multilingualism and a lower salt intake.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherViking Press
Quick facts Author, Language ...
The World Until Yesterday
Front cover of The World Until Yesterday
U.S. first edition hardback cover
AuthorJared Diamond
LanguageEnglish
SubjectTraditional societies
PublisherViking Press
Publication date
December 31, 2012
Publication placeUnited States
Pages499
ISBN978-0-670-02481-0
OCLC793726658
Preceded byCollapse 
Followed byUpheaval 
Close

Reception

The World Until Yesterday has had a mixed reception. Abby O'Reilly of The Independent called it "essential reading" that "cements [Diamond's] position as the most considered, courageous and sensitive teller of the human story writing today."[1] In The New York Times, David Brooks' review was mostly positive; but he lamented the lack of individual indigenous voices in the book, calling it "curiously impersonal."[2]

Anthropologists' reception of the book was less positive. Ethnobotanist Wade Davis said both the scope of the "lessons" drawn and the range of ethnographic evidence used to support them was limited, characterizing it as "a book of great promise [that] reads as a compendium of the obvious, ethnology by anecdote."[3] Indigenous leaders in West Papua[4] and indigenous rights organization Survival International[5] objected to Diamond's characterization of tribal societies as violent.

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI