The Right Hand: Left-Handedness
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:11th Oct '12
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This 1891 work examines the history and possible reasons behind left-handedness, as recorded by an eminent archaeologist and anthropologist.
As a left-hander, the archaeologist and anthropologist Daniel Wilson (1816–92) was interested to discover as many left-handed Stone Age implements as right. In 1891 he published the results of his studies of left-handedness, which he concludes is hereditary and relates to the dominance of one hemisphere of the brain.Throughout history, left-handedness has been viewed as being the mark of the devil, as evidence of mental retardation or neurosis, as showing a predisposition to criminality, or as being linked to every perceived social ill. Even into the nineteenth century, many scientists were of the opinion that left-handedness was the sign of a sinister personality. An eminent ethnologist and one of the first scientific archaeologists, Daniel Wilson (1816–92), who introduced into English the word 'prehistoric', became aware of the fact that there were as many left-handed Stone Age implements as right. As a left-hander himself, he was fascinated by these discoveries. Published in 1891, his last major work gives the results of his studies of left-handedness, which he concludes is hereditary and relates to the dominance of one hemisphere of the brain.
ISBN: 9781108053068
Dimensions: 216mm x 140mm x 13mm
Weight: 300g
234 pages