Women played leading role in history
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. ˜ Hold on to your bearskin hats and
your macramé snoods, readers: You are in for a wild
verbal ride through your deep, deep past.
The authors of a new book have fashioned a 16-chapter
prehistory theme park worthy of Disney, but in their
confection, lame, even egregious, past assumptions
about our past are hunted down and slain, and stars ˆ
in the form of womankind ˆ are born.
"The Invisible Sex: Uncovering the True Roles of Women
in History" (Smithsonian Books/Collins) is a roller
coaster ride through Homo sapiens' unsteady past. No
stone tool is left unturned to bring us up on what is
ˆ and what is not ˆ probable about our long and
miraculous journey.
The authors are archaeologists J.M. Adovasio, the
founder and director of the Mercyhurst Archaeological
Institute; Olga Soffer, a professor of anthropology at
the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; and
Jake Page, a freelance writer. Adovasio is an expert
on perishable prehistoric artifacts; Soffer is an
expert on the Paleolithic Period and peoples of the
Old World.
Of greatest import in this book is the idea that women
have always been major players ˆ not simply
baby-machines who tended to the children, rustled up
roots, collected nuts and berries and relied on macho
male hunters to bring home the bacon.
Read entire article at Archaeological News
your macramé snoods, readers: You are in for a wild
verbal ride through your deep, deep past.
The authors of a new book have fashioned a 16-chapter
prehistory theme park worthy of Disney, but in their
confection, lame, even egregious, past assumptions
about our past are hunted down and slain, and stars ˆ
in the form of womankind ˆ are born.
"The Invisible Sex: Uncovering the True Roles of Women
in History" (Smithsonian Books/Collins) is a roller
coaster ride through Homo sapiens' unsteady past. No
stone tool is left unturned to bring us up on what is
ˆ and what is not ˆ probable about our long and
miraculous journey.
The authors are archaeologists J.M. Adovasio, the
founder and director of the Mercyhurst Archaeological
Institute; Olga Soffer, a professor of anthropology at
the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; and
Jake Page, a freelance writer. Adovasio is an expert
on perishable prehistoric artifacts; Soffer is an
expert on the Paleolithic Period and peoples of the
Old World.
Of greatest import in this book is the idea that women
have always been major players ˆ not simply
baby-machines who tended to the children, rustled up
roots, collected nuts and berries and relied on macho
male hunters to bring home the bacon.