ABSTRACT

This volume shows how hunter gatherer societies maintain their traditional lifeways in the face of interaction with neighboring herders, farmers, and traders. Using historical, anthropological and archaeological data and cases from Africa, Australia, and Southeast Asia, the authors examine hunter gatherer peoples—both past and present--to assess these relationships and the mechanisms by which hunter gatherers adapt and maintain elements of their culture in the wider world around them.

chapter 6|24 pages

Soaqua and Bushmen

Hunters and Robbers

chapter 7|20 pages

Prehistoric Herders and Foragers of the Kalahari

The Evidence for 1500 Years of Interaction

chapter 8|30 pages

The !Kung in the Kalahari Exchange

An Ethnohistorical Perspective

chapter 9|28 pages

Ideological Continuities in Prehistoric Southern Africa

The Evidence of Rock Art

chapter 10|24 pages

To Find Ourselves

Art and Social Geography of Prehistoric Hunter Gatherers