CULTURE: THE STORY OF US , FROM CAVE ART TO K-POP By Martin Puchner

I enjoyed Martin Puchner’s The Written World so much I decided to read his new book, Culture: The Story of US, From Cave Art to K-Pop. Puchner takes the reader around the world in this wide-ranging survey of world cultures.

My favorite chapter is Chapter 13: George Eliot Promotes the Science of the Past. I learned a lot about Mary Ann Evans (aka, “George Eliot”) that I didn’t know. I didn’t know she translated the works of German philosopher Ludwig Feuerbach. I discovered she read Hegel and incorporated some of his ideas about History into Middlemarch (1871). And I learned she wrote an essay entitled “Silly Novels by Lady Novelists” that I will have to track down and read.

If you’re in the mood for a breezy tour of thousands of years of cultural development all over the world, Martin Puchner’s Culture is your ticket. GRADE: B+

TABLE OF CONTENTS:

Preface: How culture works — xi

Introduction: Inside the Chauvet Cave, 35,000 BCE — xii

Queen Nefertiti and her faceless god — 1

Plato burns his tragedy and invents a history — 23

King Ashoka sends a message to the future — 36

A south Asian goddess in Pompeii — 53

A Buddhist pilgrim in search of ancient traces — 70

The Pillow Book and some perils of cultural diplomacy — 87

When Baghdad became a storehouse of wisdom — 105

The Queen of Ethiopia welcomes the raiders of the ark — 123

One Christian mystic and the three revivals of Europe — 140

The Aztec capital faces its European enemies and admirers — 164

A Portuguese sailor writes a global epic — 185

Enlightenment in Saint-Domingue and in a Parisian salon — 206

George Eliot promotes the science of the past — 227

A Japanese wave takes the world by storm — 246

The drama of Nigerian independence — 266

Epilogue: Will there be a library in 2114 CE? — 287

Acknowledgements — 305

Notes — 309

Index — 337

10 thoughts on “CULTURE: THE STORY OF US , FROM CAVE ART TO K-POP By Martin Puchner

  1. Jeff+Meyerson

    Nah, that’s a pass for me. Too many books, too little time. All week I dread looking at my email because I keep getting notices from the Brooklyn Public Library that an ebook I’ve reserved is ready to be checked out. Why do they all come at once?

    Reply
    1. george Post author

      Jeff, I know that feeling. I dread going to the Library to find FOUR books came in at the same time. That just happened to me last week!

      Reply
  2. wolfi7777

    Too many books and not enough time …
    I thought the name was familiar so I looked him up on German wiki.
    Yes he’s a German, studied near where I live in Konstanz and then went on to the USA to have a career, switching universities regularly.
    His name is pronounced poo-ch-ner but I think the German “ch” sound doesn’t exist in the English language, just as we don’t have the “th”.

    Reply

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