Houses and House-Life of the American Aborigines

audiobook

Houses and House-Life of the American Aborigines

by Lewis Henry Morgan

EN·~11 hours

Chapters

Description

This volume explores the domestic architecture of North‑American Indigenous peoples, tracing how their homes evolved from simple shelters to complex, multi‑family structures. The author draws connections between the long houses of the Iroquois, the adobe tenements of the Southwest, and the stone dwellings of the Maya‑influenced regions, showing how shared needs and cultural ideas shaped each design. By presenting these building types as a single, coherent system, the book reveals the underlying social principles that guided communal living.

The first part focuses on how families, unable to survive alone, pooled resources into larger households organized around clan and kinship ties. Detailed descriptions of construction methods, spatial organization, and everyday life within these homes illustrate the intimate link between architecture and social structure. Readers gain a clear picture of how house‑life served as a key to understanding broader patterns of Indigenous culture and societal development.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~11 hours (667K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2005-05-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Lewis Henry Morgan

Lewis Henry Morgan

1818–1881

A pioneering 19th-century American anthropologist, he helped shape early thinking about kinship, social organization, and the study of Indigenous societies. His best-known works explored the Haudenosaunee and argued that family systems could reveal how human societies develop over time.

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