The evolution of literacy: a cross-cultural account of literacy’s emergence, spread, and relationship with human cooperation

<p>Social theorists have long argued that literacy is one of the principal causes and hallmark features of complex society. However, the relationship between literacy and social complexity remains poorly understood because the relevant data have not been assembled in a way that would allow com...

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Main Author: Mullins, D
Other Authors: Whitehouse, H
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
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author Mullins, D
author2 Whitehouse, H
author_facet Whitehouse, H
Mullins, D
author_sort Mullins, D
collection OXFORD
description <p>Social theorists have long argued that literacy is one of the principal causes and hallmark features of complex society. However, the relationship between literacy and social complexity remains poorly understood because the relevant data have not been assembled in a way that would allow competing hypotheses to be adjudicated. The project set out in this thesis provides a novel account of the multiple origins of literate behaviour around the globe, the principal mechanisms of its cultural transmission, and its relationship with the cultural evolution of large-group human cooperation and complex forms of socio-political organisation. A multi-method large-scale cross-cultural approach provided the data necessary to achieve these objectives. Evidence from the societies within which literate behaviour first emerged, and from a representative sample of ethnographically-attested societies worldwide (n=74), indicates that literate behaviour emerged through the routinization of rituals and pre-literate sign systems, eventually spreading more widely through classical religions. Cross-cultural evidence also suggests that literacy assumed a wide variety of forms and socio-political functions, particularly in large, complex groups, extending evolved psychological mechanisms for cooperation, which include reciprocity, reputation formation and maintenance systems, social norms and norm enforcement systems, and group identification. Finally, the results of a cross-cultural historical survey of first-generation states (n=10) reveal that simple models assuming single cause-and-effect relationships between literacy and complex forms of socio-political organisation must be rejected. Instead, literacy and first-generation state-level polities appear to have interacted in a complex positive feedback loop. This thesis contributes to the wider goal of transforming social and cultural anthropology into a cumulative and rapid-discovery science.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:98d1f155-c96d-4ba0-ac36-c610d3d7454c2023-11-10T10:51:43ZThe evolution of literacy: a cross-cultural account of literacy’s emergence, spread, and relationship with human cooperationThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:98d1f155-c96d-4ba0-ac36-c610d3d7454cCuneiformScience and religionLanguage and cognitive developmentEconomic historyVisual art and representationPhilosophy,psychology and sociology of religionHistory of technologySocial anthropologyPhilosophy of scienceLiteracyStatistics (social sciences)History of scienceGame theory,economics,social and behavioral sciences (mathematics)AnthropologyPrehistoric and primitive religionsDevelopmental psychologyArchaeologyPhoneticsEconomic and Social HistoryMemoryCognitive anthropologyCommerce,communications,transportGlobalLiteratures of other languagesEnglishOxford University Research Archive - Valet2014Mullins, DWhitehouse, H<p>Social theorists have long argued that literacy is one of the principal causes and hallmark features of complex society. However, the relationship between literacy and social complexity remains poorly understood because the relevant data have not been assembled in a way that would allow competing hypotheses to be adjudicated. The project set out in this thesis provides a novel account of the multiple origins of literate behaviour around the globe, the principal mechanisms of its cultural transmission, and its relationship with the cultural evolution of large-group human cooperation and complex forms of socio-political organisation. A multi-method large-scale cross-cultural approach provided the data necessary to achieve these objectives. Evidence from the societies within which literate behaviour first emerged, and from a representative sample of ethnographically-attested societies worldwide (n=74), indicates that literate behaviour emerged through the routinization of rituals and pre-literate sign systems, eventually spreading more widely through classical religions. Cross-cultural evidence also suggests that literacy assumed a wide variety of forms and socio-political functions, particularly in large, complex groups, extending evolved psychological mechanisms for cooperation, which include reciprocity, reputation formation and maintenance systems, social norms and norm enforcement systems, and group identification. Finally, the results of a cross-cultural historical survey of first-generation states (n=10) reveal that simple models assuming single cause-and-effect relationships between literacy and complex forms of socio-political organisation must be rejected. Instead, literacy and first-generation state-level polities appear to have interacted in a complex positive feedback loop. This thesis contributes to the wider goal of transforming social and cultural anthropology into a cumulative and rapid-discovery science.</p>
spellingShingle Cuneiform
Science and religion
Language and cognitive development
Economic history
Visual art and representation
Philosophy,psychology and sociology of religion
History of technology
Social anthropology
Philosophy of science
Literacy
Statistics (social sciences)
History of science
Game theory,economics,social and behavioral sciences (mathematics)
Anthropology
Prehistoric and primitive religions
Developmental psychology
Archaeology
Phonetics
Economic and Social History
Memory
Cognitive anthropology
Commerce,communications,transport
Global
Literatures of other languages
Mullins, D
The evolution of literacy: a cross-cultural account of literacy’s emergence, spread, and relationship with human cooperation
title The evolution of literacy: a cross-cultural account of literacy’s emergence, spread, and relationship with human cooperation
title_full The evolution of literacy: a cross-cultural account of literacy’s emergence, spread, and relationship with human cooperation
title_fullStr The evolution of literacy: a cross-cultural account of literacy’s emergence, spread, and relationship with human cooperation
title_full_unstemmed The evolution of literacy: a cross-cultural account of literacy’s emergence, spread, and relationship with human cooperation
title_short The evolution of literacy: a cross-cultural account of literacy’s emergence, spread, and relationship with human cooperation
title_sort evolution of literacy a cross cultural account of literacy s emergence spread and relationship with human cooperation
topic Cuneiform
Science and religion
Language and cognitive development
Economic history
Visual art and representation
Philosophy,psychology and sociology of religion
History of technology
Social anthropology
Philosophy of science
Literacy
Statistics (social sciences)
History of science
Game theory,economics,social and behavioral sciences (mathematics)
Anthropology
Prehistoric and primitive religions
Developmental psychology
Archaeology
Phonetics
Economic and Social History
Memory
Cognitive anthropology
Commerce,communications,transport
Global
Literatures of other languages
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