Four Lost Cities Audiolibro Por Annalee Newitz arte de portada

Four Lost Cities

A Secret History of the Urban Age

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Four Lost Cities

De: Annalee Newitz
Narrado por: Chloe Cannon
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In Four Lost Cities, acclaimed science journalist Annalee Newitz takes listeners on an entertaining and mind-bending adventure into the deep history of urban life. Investigating across the centuries and around the world, Newitz explores the rise and fall of four ancient cities, each the center of a sophisticated civilization: the Neolithic site of Çatalhöyük in Central Turkey, the Roman vacation town of Pompeii on Italy's southern coast, the medieval megacity of Angkor in Cambodia, and the indigenous metropolis Cahokia, which stood beside the Mississippi River where East St. Louis is today.

Newitz travels to all four sites and investigates the cutting-edge research in archaeology, revealing the mix of environmental changes and political turmoil that doomed these ancient settlements. Tracing the early development of urban planning, Newitz also introduces us to the often anonymous workers-slaves, women, immigrants, and manual laborers-who built these cities and created monuments that lasted millennia.

Four Lost Cities is a journey into the forgotten past, but, foreseeing a future in which the majority of people on Earth will be living in cities, it may also reveal something of our own fate.

©2021 Annalee Newitz (P)2021 HighBridge, a division of Recorded Books
Antiguo Arqueología Ciencia Ciencias Geológicas Civilización Geografía Física Geología Mundial Sociología Urban Nonfiction
Fascinating Archaeological Insights • Engaging Historical Narratives • Clear Pleasant Voice • Detailed Cultural Analysis

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A really interesting investigation into the formation and decline of cities across human history. Newitz uses archeological evidence to make the case that the evolution and dissolution of cities is not a linear path, that the very definition of a "city" and is growth are defined more by socio-cultural forces of its time than by rigid and often arbitrary models based solely on commerce. She then cleverly weaves in the latent warnings present in our urban past about our potentially disastrous future.

Interesting investigation of urban history

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This book has an interesting premise, but admittedly I had a hard time getting through it. There are some interesting details about ancient societies and the way that lived but much of it felt irrelevant to why cities decline.

Food for thought

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Author states that its from a journalist perspective, so for that reason I think it's well done. If it were to be purely historical, I would be more critical. I particularly enjoyed the remarks against Diamond, as that came up in my Anthropology and Archeology classes.

Not bad

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Super interesting topics, wonderfully told. Even just hearing about how historians are able to piece together so much history out of tiny fragments is incredible. The weaving together and analysis and insights into humanity still feel very current and relevant. Truly fantastic read

FASCINATING

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The allure of "lost cities" is a strong one; many of us love the story of one lost city or another. Annalee Newitz gives us the stories of four of them--Çatalhöyük, a Neolithic site in Turkey; Pompeii, on the Italian coast and the slope of Mt. Vesuvius; medieval Angkor in Cambodia; Cahokia, an indigenous North American metropolis at the site that's now East St. Louis.

Newitz looks at each of these cities using new developments and techniques in archaeology to consider the cities and their culture through the lives of the average residents as well as the elites.

Çatalhöyük is built in layers--houses being abandoned and, after some gap in time, new houses being built over them, with streets and walkways on top of the current layer of houses. Workers carried something very like business cards, identifying their trades and other affiliations, in the first human settlement large enough that you didn't, couldn't know everyone.

In Pompeii, freed slaves, their offspring, and lower-ranked citizens would buy the former villas of the elites, and turn them into shops, workshops, and apartments--often trying to preserve the look of an elite villa as much as they could. Freed slaves took their former owner's family name as their own new family name, and maintained connections and obligations to them. As a vacation city, Pompeii had a thriving commercial culture, until the volcano ended it.

Angkor was a city of temples, and dependent on excellent water management because of its environment. Unfortunately, while some of the water management decisions were grounded in solid engineering, others were grounded in politics and religious ideas of advantageous orientation. Labor management was also very much top-down, and not every ruler did that wisely or with a sense of the limits of what people would tolerate.

Cahokia, center of the Mississippian culture, was built around a series of public squares, where public meetings, religious meetings, sports, and entertainment all happened. There was not one single center to the city, but public squares in every part of it, with people coming from all over to participate in major festivals. There seems to have been no particular organized system of economic exchange, with families, neighborhoods, and other types of groups reaching arrangements that worked for them. Cahokia wasn't about economics; it was about their thriving, shared religion.

What's really striking and exciting about Newitz's account, though, is about how none of these "lost cities" were ever truly lost. The local populations not only knew where they were, but in the all except Pompeii, which became a toxic ruin in the aftermath of the Vesuvius eruption, continued to use the area, though in different ways, as the environment and the local culture changed. Angkor in particular is an outrageous case of misrepresentation. A Frenchman "found" the city around the time the French took control of Cambodia as a colony. At the time, the population was low compared to earlier periods, but monks were at the temple still conducting religious ceremonies, and there's ample documentation of foreign visitors, including from China, visiting the city. The French had to kick the monks out of the temple in order to pursue their own plans of making it a French "discovery" and tourist attraction.

Çatalhöyük's neighbors knew where it was, dug up artifacts while ploughing their fields, and sometimes using bits and pieces from it. Cahokia's population dispersed but didn't disappear, though the Eurasian diseases brought by Europeans eventually devastated what was left before Europeans even reached the area--and it's still populated now. Mostly by the descendants of Europeans and Africans, and we do call it East St. Louis, now. Yet the area never ceased to be a population center, even though the uses and organization have changed.

Pompeii did die, of course, but not due to the fall of its civilization. The place merely became uninhabitable. Rome's government organized a major humanitarian relief project, originally intending to rebuild as had happened after earthquakes. When that clearly couldn't be done, the relief went to resettling the surviving residents instead--and many of those people continued to identify as being from Pompeii, and maintained contact with their Pompeiian neighbors and connections.

Urbanization changes, but it doesn't go away.

And yes, Newitz makes this much more interesting than I do, while Chloe Cannon helps by doing an excellent job as the narrator.

Highly recommended.

I bought this audiobook.

What really happened to four "lost" cities

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“Four Lost Cities” will be fascinating for those who are curious about archeology, anthropology, sociology and urban life. The book is filled with surprising facts and speculation about the rise and decline of four ancient cities: Catalhoyuk in Turkey and Cahokia in East St. Louis (I had never heard of either), as well as Pompeii and Angkor. The author is a lively, amusing writer. She is deeply engaged with her subject. Unfortunately, I was not. My mind kept wandering as I listened to this well-researched study.

Ancient Civ

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The theme for this book is a bit disjointed but it is still mildly interesting. Some of the details (the Roman Colosseum was not flooded for gladiatorial contests – that’s an urban myth that should’ve been easily corrected) were suspect, and when you find one, possibly wrong item, you sort of suspect the rest. I mildly regret spending the credit.

Disappointing

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Loved this book. A historical, anthropological- archeological reason for the establishment of large urban centers.

Turns out cities do simply happen.

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I found this book to be pretty boring. I think there is humor in the writing, but the reader wasn't very natural sounding, to me she sounded very rigid and serious. I would have like this more reading it myself, though I still think parts of the book were a little dull.

Not the best reader.

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This may be one of the most interesting books on ancient cities I’ve had the pleasure of “reading” (listening to).
I deep dive into all four cities is informative but I especially enjoyed the final city of Cahokia. I’ve read some on it but I learned a lot of new things - notably that commerce was not the reason for existing (a mistaken notion of European thinking that all cities are birthed in commerce and trade).
I liked listening to this as I was doing house and yard work but I like it enough I will be ordering a hard copy for my library as well.

Ancient Urban Life is Fascinating

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