Footmarks
A Journey Into our Restless Past
by Jim Leary
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Pub Date 6 Jul 2023 | Archive Date 3 Nov 2023
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Description
'Lucid, poetic and fascinating' ALICE ROBERTS
'Engaging, authoritative and full of fascinating stories of the past' RAY MEARS
'A gentle, personal and very readable book' JULIA BLACKBURN AUTHOR OF TIME SONG
'A triumph!' JAMES CANTON, AUTHOR OF THE OAK PAPERS
'I loved this book' FRANCIS PRYOR
On paths, roads, seas, in the air, and in space - there has never been so much human movement. In contrast we think of the past as static, 'frozen in time'. But archaeologists have in fact always found evidence for humanity's irrepressible restlessness. Now, latest developments in science and archaeology are transforming this evidence and overturning how we understand the past movement of humankind.
In this book, archaeologist Jim Leary traces the past 3.5 million years to reveal how people have always been moving, how travel has historically been enforced (or prohibited) by people with power, and how our forebears showed incredible bravery and ingenuity to journey across continents and oceans.
With Leary to show the way, you'll follow the footsteps of early hunter-gatherers preserved in mud, and tread ancient trackways hollowed by feet over time. Passing drovers, wayfarers and pilgrims, you'll see who got to move, and how people moved. And you'll go on long-distance journeys and migrations to see how movement has shaped our world.
Available Editions
EDITION | Other Format |
ISBN | 9781837730247 |
PRICE | US$29.99 (USD) |
PAGES | 288 |
Available on NetGalley
Featured Reviews
A thoughtful reminder that our ancestors were once living moving people, with lives as meandering as our own.
Footmarks introduces a concept. It is neither a dry non-fiction analysis of archaeological sites, nor a sensationalised narrative, Footmarks explores our connection to our ancestors through the similarities and traces that remain in how peoples of the past moved across the earth. The curiosity of children as evidenced in footprints left behind, the exploration and migrations that have happened since visible human behaviour can be traced, the language of movement in our place names, and the language we use to discuss thoughts. Footmarks discusses how journeys are not just a physical act of travelling from one place to another, but a part of our communication, our link to the earth, and to each other. Archaeology is often concentrated on sites, fixed places, not the spaces in between, and the lives and laughter that would have echoed as people made their way in, around, through, over, between those places, or simply walking to nowhere at all.
Each chapter discusses a different type of movement, from the small steps to the vast ocean voyages, all evidenced with examples that encourage readers to investigate more, and all threaded with Jim Leary's personal journeys through his career, his relationship with his family, and personal loss.
This will interest anyone who looks at our world and it's history with curiosity, and is the kind of book that will find you searching for others on the various topics introduced. I recommend reading this on a bright morning, you'll find the hills and vast skies calling after you've read it, so spare time for this and a good walk after.
I read this with a little bit of trepidation, because the author is a colleague of mine, though he didn't know I was going to read this, and I didn't know he had written it, until I saw it on Netgalley. I don't tend to read books by people I know in case I don't like them, or can't give high enough praise, but I genuinely enjoyed this.
Thank you to Netgalley and the publisher for an advanced copy in exchange for an honest review.
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