An Instinct for DragonsFirst published in 2002. The image of a dragon- magnificent, terrifying, voracious and powerful- is ingrained in our culture. But where di it originate? And how is that people from Africa to China to America picture it the same? An Instinct for Dragons is anthropologist David E. Jones' account of his search for the mysterious birth of this ubiquitous monster. Nit only does virtually every culture in the world have a name for dragons- smok in Polish, tatsu in Japanese, unktena in Cherokee- but dragons everywhere share many of the same characteristics: multiple heads, blazing eyes, earth-shaking roars, fiery breath, and the abduction of princesses. Spanning dragon lore from all paces and periods, Jones scrutinizes sightings and references from dragon inscriptions on cave walls, cliffs and pots to the Loch Ness monster to the Internet. Jones' research is erudite, and his conclusion is stunning; not only is our fear and fascination with dragons a direct result of the predators who threatened our evolution, but humankind is essentially 'hardwired' to believe in the dragon. This book will fascinate any reader interested in the cultural history of this most venerable of monsters. |
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LibraryThing Review
User Review - waltzmn - LibraryThingGenerally, the idea of a race is to get to the finish line, not to see how far you can go beyond it. The book opens with the observation that vervet monkeys, and some other primates, seem to have ... Read full review
An instinct for dragons
User Review - Not Available - Book VerdictJones (anthropology, Univ. of Central Florida) contends that the dragon, a universal image of a creature that does not exist, is a direct result of the evolutionary process. Guided by the tenets of ... Read full review
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
The Monkey Hunters | 25 |
Running from Certain Shadows | 39 |
Red Tooth Red Claw | 47 |
How Time Makes a Dragon | 55 |
Why Dragons Breathe Fire | 73 |
Time of the Dragon Slayers | 95 |
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Common terms and phrases
Africa ancestors ancient animal appearance arboreal associated attack bands basic beast become behavior believed birds body brain breath called cats cause central century changes Chinese clawed complex creature culture danger deep depicted described dragon image eagle earth evolution evolutionary evolved example exist experience eyes face fact fear feet FIGURE force four Further genetic giant gods ground head horns human hunting Indians infants killed king later lemurs leopard lives look major million years ago monkeys monster mouth move natural selection noted organization original patterns period placed population predators present Press prey primate raptor reactions relative responses result rise scales seen serpent snakes social sometimes specific suggest symbol tail teeth tree tribes typical units University vervet Western wings World monkeys York