1 / 13

Type of Societies

Type of Societies. “ORIGINS OF THE human organization …”. Concepts of Societies.

tuari
Download Presentation

Type of Societies

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Type of Societies “ORIGINS OF THE human organization…”

  2. Concepts of Societies

  3. The society we live in did not spring up overnight; human societies have evolved slowly over many millenniums. However, throughout history, technological developments have sometimes brought about dramatic change that has propelled human society into its next age.

  4. Types of Societies: • - Hunting and GatheringSocieties • - Horticultural Societies • - Pastoral Societies • - AgriculturalSocieties • - Industrial Societies • - Postindustrial Societies

  5. DefiningConcepts Pastoral Societies

  6. Pastoral Society • A pastoral society relies on the domestication and breeding of animals for food. Some geographic regions, such as the desert regions of North Africa, cannot support crops, so these societies learned how to domesticate and breed animals. The members of a pastoral society must move only when the grazing land ceases to be usable. Many pastoral societies still exist in Africa, Latin America, and parts of Asia.

  7. Pastoral Society • As techniques for raising crops and domesticating and breeding animals improved, societies began to produce more food than they needed. Societies also became larger and more permanently rooted to one location.

  8. Investigation • A classicdescription of a pastoral societywasgivenbyE.E.EvansPritchard, whostudiedtheNuer, a society in thesouthern Sudan, Africa. TheNuer are dividedintotribes , whichsometimescollaboratewithoneanother, butmostlylivespearately. Eachtribe has itsownarea of landthedivisionsmostlybeingmarkedby wáter-courses. Much of thelife of theNuerisbound up withtheircattle, which are in manyways central to their culture.

  9. DefiningConcepts • AgrarianSocieties

  10. AgrarianSocieties • The invention of the plow during the horticultural and pastoral societies is considered the second social revolution, and it led to the establishment of agricultural societies approximately five thousand to six thousand years ago. Members of an agricultural or agrariansociety tend crops with an animal harnessed to a plow. The use of animals to pull a plow eventually led to the creation of cities and formed the basic structure of most modern societies.

  11. AgrarianSocieties • The development of agricultural societies followed this general sequence: • - Animals are used to pull plows. • - Larger areas of land can then be cultivated. • - As the soil is aerated during plowing, it yields more crops for longer periods of time. • - Productivity increases, and as long as there is plenty of food, people do not have to move. • - Towns form, and then cities. • - Fewer people are directly involved with the production of food, and the economy becomes more complex.

  12. Investigation • Our sample of agrarian societies is quite large, because so many of them have main- • tained written records, and have persisted until quite recently • Even today, poorer nations • typically categorized as “Third World” or “Less Developed Countries” (LDCs) are gener- • ally agrarian societies, albeit with variable admixtures of industrial technology. Geertz • (1965) gives a classic account of one such society, Indonesia. China, India, Peru, and many • others retain much of the technology and other culture core features of agrarian societies. • The description of such societies comes largely from historians, although anthropologists, • sociologists, economic historians, and others have made major contributions to understand- • ing such systems.

  13. Examples

More Related