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Tobias Hecht's Top Book Recommendations

Want to know what books Tobias Hecht recommends on their reading list? We've researched interviews, social media posts, podcasts, and articles to build a comprehensive list of Tobias Hecht's favorite book recommendations of all time.

1
This book is an intellectual tour de force: a comprehensive Darwinian interpretation of human development. Looking at the entire range of human evolutionary history, Melvin Konner tells the compelling and complex story of how cross-cultural and universal characteristics of our growth from infancy to adolescence became rooted in genetically inherited characteristics of the human brain.

All study of our evolution starts with one simple truth: human beings take an extraordinarily long time to grow up. What does this extended period of dependency have to do with human brain growth and...
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Recommended by Tobias Hecht, and 1 others.

Tobias HechtThis book explores some of the questions that loom largest to parents, such as sleeping, crying, nursing and walking. (Source)

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2
New parents are faced with innumerable decisions to make regarding the best way to care for their baby, and, naturally, they often turn for guidance to friends and family members who have already raised children. But as scientists are discovering, much of the trusted advice that has been passed down through generations needs to be carefully reexamined.

A thought-provoking combination of practical parenting information and scientific analysis, Our Babies, Ourselves is the first book to explore why we raise our children the way we do--and to suggest that we reconsider our...
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Recommended by Tobias Hecht, and 1 others.

Tobias HechtThe contents are expertly chosen and cover parenting strategies, language education, socialisation, play and more. (Source)

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3

Anthropology and Child Development

A Cross-Cultural Reader

This unprecedented collection of articles is an introduction to the study of cultural variations in childhood across the world and to the theoretical frameworks for investigating and interpreting them.
Presents a history of cross-cultural approaches to child-development
Recent articles examine diverse contexts of childhood in ecological, semiotic, and sociolinguistic terms
Includes ethnographic studies of childhood in the Pacific, Africa, Latin America, East Asia, Europe and North America
Illuminates the process through which people become the bearers of...
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Recommended by Tobias Hecht, and 1 others.

Tobias HechtThe book touches on play, discipline, communication, attachment, fathering and more. (Source)

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4
In this comprehensive and provocative study of maternal reactions to child death in Guinea-Bissau, West Africa, anthropologist Jónína Einarsdóttir challenges the assumption that mothers in high-poverty societies will neglect their children and fail to mourn their deaths as a survival strategy. Based on ethnographic fieldwork conducted from 1993 to 1998 among the matrilineal Papel, who reside in the Biombo region, this work includes theoretical discussion of reproductive practices, conceptions of children, childcare customs, interpretations of diseases and death, and infanticide. Einarsdóttir... more
Recommended by Tobias Hecht, and 1 others.

Tobias HechtIn a context where a third of children die before their fifth birthday, what do mothers feel when they lose a baby? This is the key question here. (Source)

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5
When a new baby arrives among the Beng people of West Africa, they see it not as being born, but as being reincarnated after a rich life in a previous world. Far from being a tabula rasa, a Beng infant is thought to begin its life filled with spiritual knowledge. How do these beliefs affect the way the Beng rear their children?

In this unique and engaging ethnography of babies, Alma Gottlieb explores how religious ideology affects every aspect of Beng childrearing practices—from bathing infants to protecting them from disease to teaching them how to crawl and walk—and how...
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Recommended by Alison Gopnik, Tobias Hecht, and 2 others.

Alison GopnikThis book is a beautiful and moving account of the relationships between the mothers and children in this community and how close they are, even when childhood is endangered. (Source)

Tobias HechtThough this is what you could call an infant-centred ethnography, even Gottlieb approaches babies largely through what adults and older children say about them and do with them. (Source)

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