The winner by a clear majority (68% of the votes on the first vote) is Dawn of Everything. I have been listening to it on audiobook and it slaps.

David Graeber and David Wengrow – ‘The Dawn of Everything: A New History of Humanity’. This new book from Graeber and Wengrow seeks to challenge assumptions about human social evolution and narratives of a linear development from primitive brutes to civilised people. Instead, the authors draw attention to the diversity of earlier human societies, arguing that humans had lived in large, complex, and decentralized societies for thousands of years. In doing so, Graeber and Wengrow fundamentally transform both our understanding of the past, and our vision for new ways of organising society in the future.

Schedule

  • Thursday 23rd December - Foreword, Chapters 1 & 2
  • Sunday 2nd January - Chapters 3 & 4
  • Sunday 9th January - Chapters 5 & 6
  • Sunday 16th January - Chapters 7 & 8
  • Sunday 23rd January - Chapters 9 & 10
  • Sunday 30th January - Chapter 11 & Conclusion

How to participate:

You can purchase the book, access it on Perusall, your local library or fly the black flag for the audiobook or book copy.

Additional Announcements

Somebody suggested a great idea of utilizing perusall a bit better. I will make sure to bring in comments from Perusall. I would also encourage everyone to get on perusall at a specific date and time (something that can be worked out perhaps in the middle of the week). If anyone wants to posts about when they'll be reading on perusall, you are welcomed to submit a post HERE, and tag me. I will pin your post. We are also working with the admins to make these events in more tightly connected to the sites' activities and happenings. Also anybody knows how the fuck to use discord, I'm a fucking boomer when it comes to the thing and I could use some help.

  • RedCloud [he/him]
    ·
    3 years ago

    That's a good point. You'd think with places like Japan or India being some of the biggest polluters and with such a significant histories of ultra-nationalism and ethnic conflict they would warrant some examination in a book about climate change and fascism.