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Academic & Professional Books  Evolutionary Biology  Human Evolution

The Origin of Language How We Learned to Speak and Why

Popular Science New
By: Madeleine Beekman(Author)
368 pages, b/w illustrations
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
The Origin of Language
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  • The Origin of Language ISBN: 9781398548428 Hardback Aug 2025 Not in stock: Usually dispatched within 1-2 weeks
    £25.00
    #266875
Price: £25.00
About this book Customer reviews Biography Related titles

About this book

In a radical new story about the birth of our species, The Origin of Language argues that it was not hunting, fighting, or tool-making that forced early humans to speak, but the inescapable need to care for our children.

Journeying to the dawn of Homo sapiens, evolutionary biologist Madeleine Beekman reveals the "happy accidents" hidden in our molecular biology – DNA, chromosomes, and proteins – that led to one of the most fateful events in the history of life on Earth: our giving birth to babies earlier in their development than our hominid cousins the Neanderthals and Denisovans. Faced with highly dependent infants requiring years of nurturing and protection, early human communities needed to cooperate and coordinate, and it was this unprecedented need for communication that triggered the creation of human language – and changed everything.

Infused with cutting-edge science, sharp humour, and insights into the history of biology and its luminaries, Beekman weaves a narrative that's both enlightening and entertaining. Challenging the traditional theories of male luminaries like Chomksy, Pinker, and Harari, she invites us into the intricate world of molecular biology and its ancient secrets. The Origin of Language is a tour de force by a brilliant biologist on how a culture of cooperation and care have shaped our existence.

Customer Reviews

Biography

Madeleine Beekman is a professor of evolutionary biology and behavioural ecology emerita at the University of Sydney, Australia, Editor-in-Chief of Insectes Sociaux, and board member of the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, Biological Sciences. Madeleine Beekman lives in Australia's northern tropical rainforest with her husband where she can observe cassowaries from her office. She has two adult daughters.

Popular Science New
By: Madeleine Beekman(Author)
368 pages, b/w illustrations
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Media reviews

"The Origin of Language is a tour de force. At its core it seeks to explain the origin of language. But, by linking our patterns of sociality, behavior, development, and communication it is a celebration of humanity's origins. Reading Madeleine Beekman's book, you will never look at babies – and their utterances – the same way ever again."
– Neil Shubin, evolutionary biologist and author of Your Inner Fish

"With a knack for making complex topics accessible and interesting, Beekman guides us through human evolution, with stops along the way to explain why we walk upright, why people made irrational decisions about buying honeycomb from her beehives, and why babies are cute but koalas are boring. She then persuasively argues for childcare as the linchpin in the evolution of our ability to speak, and shows how language, that extraordinary human accomplishment, engages in an exquisite to-and-fro with the brain."
– Marlene Zuk, author of Paleofantasy

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