Ancient Egypt: Anatomy of a CivilizationPsychology Press, 2006 - 437 síður Completely revised and updated to reflect the latest developments in the field, this second edition of Barry J. Kemp's popular text presents a compelling reassessment of what gave ancient Egypt its distinctive and enduring characteristics. Ranging across Ancient Egyptian material culture, social and economic experiences, and the mindset of its people, the book also includes two new chapters exploring the last ten centuries of Ancient Egyptian civilization and who, in ethnic terms, the ancients were. Fully illustrated, the book draws on both ancient written materials and decades of excavation evidence, transforming our understanding of this remarkable civilization. Broad ranging yet impressively detailed, Kemp's work is an indispensable text for all students of Ancient Egypt. |
From inside the book
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... traditions of understanding , nurtured in university departments which have been growing for more than two centuries . My ancient Egypt remains , none the less , very much an imagined world , though I hope that it is , like a marquee in ...
... traditional societies , to the founding of a ruling house . Those few individuals in whom , say , the urge to excel and ... tradition . Fam- ilies are only one kind of lesser system , and perhaps more influential in the past than now ...
... tradition . Reduced to this absolute level history becomes a tale of increasingly flamboyant ways by means of which energy is dispersed . If the outcome were to be wholly destructive then that end would be thwarted . Sufficient of what ...
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Efni
Who were the ancient Egyptians? | 19 |
The intellectual foundations of the early state | 60 |
The dynamics of culture | 111 |
The provider state | 161 |
The bureaucratic mind | 163 |
Model communities | 193 |
Intimations of our future | 245 |
New Kingdom Egypt the mature state | 247 |
The birth of economic man | 302 |
Moving on | 336 |
Epilogue | 387 |
Notes | 389 |
423 | |