The Egalitarians, Human and Chimpanzee: An Anthropological View of Social Organization

Bibliographic Collection: 
Anthropogeny
Publication Type: Book
Authors: Power, Margaret
Year of Publication: 1991
Number of Pages: 290
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
City: New York
Publication Language: eng
ISBN Number: 0521400163
Keywords: Behavior evolution, Human behavior, Primates, Social behavior in animals, Social structure, Sociobiology
Abstract:

This innovative book challenges the perceived view, based largely on long observation of artificially fed chimpanzees in Gombe and Mahale National Parks, Tanzania, of the normal social behavior of chimpanzees as aggressive, dominance seeking, and fiercely territorial. In polar opposition, all reports from naturalistic (nonfeeding) field studies are of nonaggressive chimpanzees living peacefully on home ranges in fluid, open, nonhierarchical groups. This research has been largely ignored and downgraded by most of the scientific community. By utilizing the data from these studies, the author is able to construct a model of an egalitarian form of social organization, based on a role relationship of mutual dependence among many charismatic chimpanzees of both sexes and other more dependent members. This highly and necessarily positive mututal dependence system is characteristic of both undisturbed chimpanzees and humans who live or lived by the immediate-return foraging system.

Label: 1991