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The Territorial Imperative: A Personal Inquiry into the Animal Origins of Property and Nations

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Paperback

Published January 1, 1972

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About the author

Robert Ardrey

77 books40 followers
Robert Ardrey was born in the South Side of Chicago in 1908. He attended the University of Chicago to study biology, but became the writing protegé of Thornton Wilder. He graduated in the midst of the Great Depression and supported himself with odd jobs while he wrote under Wilder's watchful eye. His first play, Star Spangled, opened on Broadway in 1935.

He continued to have plays produced on Broadway. His most famous, Thunder Rock, became a sensation in wartime London, and is now regarded as an international classic. Ardrey's plays caught the attention of MGM executive Samuel Goldwyn; in 1938 Ardrey moved to Hollywood, where he would become MGM's highest paid writer. He is credited with over a dozen films, including The Three Musketeers (1948, with Gene Kelly), The Wonderful Country (1959, with Robert Mitchum), and Khartoum (1966, directed by Basil Dearden, starring Charlton Heston and Laurence Olivier) for which he was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Screenplay.

In the 1950s, increasingly disenchanted with Hollywood, Ardrey travelled to Africa to write a series of articles. This trip renewed his interest in human origins, and he returned to his academic training in the sciences. In 1956 he moved with his wife and two sons to Geneva, and spent the next five years travelling and researching in Eastern and Southern Africa, conducting research for what would become his first scientific work, African Genesis (1961).

African Genesis and Ardrey's subsequent books were massively popular and deeply controversial. They overturned core assumptions of the social sciences and led to a revolution in thinking about human nature. Fundamentally Ardrey argued that human behavior was not entirely socially determined, rather evolutionarily inherited instincts help determine behavior and format large-scale social phenomena. Subsequent science has largely vindicated his hypotheses.

Robert Ardrey is the winner of a Guggenheim Fellowship and the inaugural Sidney Howard Memorial Award, is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, and received an Academy Award Nomination for best screenplay for his film Khartoum. Time magazine named African Genesis the most notable book of the 1960s.

For more see: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_...

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Displaying 1 of 1 review
Profile Image for Bernie4444.
2,527 reviews12 followers
October 11, 2023
Let Go of My Eggo

A territory is an area of space that an animal guards as its exclusive possession and which it will defend against all members of its kind. Of course, we did not need somebody to tell us that. Yet in 1996 we did need a book, this one as part of the popular science of the time to open our eyes to this phenomenon and what it means to us.

Look closer at the subtitle and you too will still be interested in “A Personal Inquiry into the Origins of Property and Nations (Biological Nations).”

Robert Ardrey American playwright and screenwriter does what we all do (well most of us) and dives into the anthropology of his day. Therefore, this is a terrific book to see what the general view or at least one person’s insight was in the 1960s.

Now, of course, with hindsight, there are plenty of contradictory theories and writings. But we should not overlook this gem.

This book also includes drawings by Berdine Ardrey, an extensive bibliography, and an index.
Displaying 1 of 1 review