Ancient Society (1877) proposes a unilineal sequence from Savagery to Barbarism to Civilization, keyed to pivotal inventionsfire, pottery, agriculture, metallurgy, writingand to linked changes in kinship, property, and government. Drawing expansive comparative evidence, prominently from Iroquoian institutions, Morgan fuses ethnographic observation with stadial history. His taxonomic chapters on systems of consanguinity and on family forms (consanguine, punaluan, syndyasmian, monogamous) advance a materialist claim: subsistence and technology restructure social organization. An American lawyer turned ethnologist, Morgan built the book on long collaboration with Haudenosaunee interlocutorsespecially Ely S. Parkeron adoption into a Seneca clan, and on a worldwide questionnaire cataloging kinship terms. Preceded by The League of the Iroquois and Systems of Consanguinity, his project married legal habit, field method, and nineteenth-century evolutionism to derive a "science of institutions" linking household, property, and the state. Read critically for its Eurocentric teleology, Ancient Society remains foundational: it seeded kinship studies and informed Marx and Engelss historical materialism. Students and scholars of anthropology, history, classics, and Indigenous studies will find both archive and argument herea bold, flawed, and still generative attempt to explain how technologies of subsistence reconfigure families, ownership, and political authority.Quickie Classics summarizes timeless works with precision, preserving the authors voice and keeping the prose clear, fast, and readabledistilled, never diluted. Enriched Edition extras: Introduction · Synopsis · Historical Context · Brief Analysis · 4 Reflection Q&As · Editorial Footnotes.
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