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World History Project - Origins to the Present
Course: World History Project - Origins to the Present > Unit 2
Lesson 4: Farmer Revolution | 2.3- BEFORE YOU WATCH: The Agricultural Revolution
- WATCH: The Agricultural Revolution
- READ: The Eloquent Peasant (Graphic Biography)
- READ: The First Farmers in Africa, the Cradle of Humanity
- READ: The Xianrendong Pottery (Graphic Biography)
- Farmer Revolution
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WATCH: The Agricultural Revolution
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In which John Green investigates the dawn of human civilization. John looks into how people gave up hunting and gathering to become agriculturalists, and how that change has influenced the world we live in today. Also, there are some jokes about cheeseburgers.
Additional reading:
NIsa by Marjorie Shostak: https://goo.gl/hAPr5H
First Farmers by Peter Bellwood: https://goo.gl/JqgHLW
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Want to join the conversation?
- I loved it! A couple things were weird in it, but cool.(10 votes)
- jhon always is the best way to learn about worold history its so funny!(9 votes)
- When I watched it I laughed the snot out of me(6 votes)
- Wow! The first episode.(2 votes)
- I hate when he uses slaughtering of cows because I am a hindi(0 votes)
- 1. It's just how the world is, for better or worse.
2. Not a question.(5 votes)
Video transcript
Hello, learned and astonishingly attractive
pupils. My name is John Green and I want to welcome you to Crash Course World History.
Over the next forty weeks together, we will learn how in a mere fifteen thousand years
humans went from hunting and gathering... Mr. Green, Mr. Green! Is this gonna be on
the test? Yeah, about the test: The test will measure
whether you are an informed, engaged, and productive citizen of the world, and it will
take place in schools and bars and hospitals and dorm-rooms and in places of worship. You
will be tested on first dates; in job interviews; while watching football; and while scrolling
through your Twitter feed. The test will judge your ability to think
about things other than celebrity marriages; whether you'll be easily persuaded by empty
political rhetoric; and whether you'll be able to place your life and your community
in a broader context. The test will last your entire life, and it
will be comprised of the millions of decisions that, when taken together, make your life
yours. And everything — everything — will be on it. I know, right? So pay attention. [theme music] In a mere fifteen thousand years, humans went
from hunting and gathering to creating such improbabilities as the airplane, the Internet,
and the ninety-nine cent double cheeseburger. It's an extraordinary journey, one that I
will now symbolize by embarking upon a journey of my own ... over to camera two. Hi there, camera two ... it's me, John Green.
Let's start with that double cheeseburger. Ooh, food photography! So this hot hunk of
meat contains four-hundred and ninety calories. To get this cheeseburger, you have to feed,
raise, and slaughter cows, then grind their meat, then freeze it and ship it to its destination;
you also gotta grow some wheat and then process the living crap out of it until it's whiter
than Queen Elizabeth the First; then you gotta milk some cows and turn their milk into cheese.
And that's not even to mention the growing and pickling of cucumbers or the sweetening
of tomatoes or the grinding of mustard seeds, etc. How in the sweet name of everything holy did
we ever come to live in a world in which such a thing can even be created? And HOW is it
possible that those four-hundred and ninety calories can be served to me for an amount
of money that, if I make the minimum wage here in the U.S., I can earn in ELEVEN MINUTES?
And most importantly: should I be delighted or alarmed to live in this strange world of
relative abundance? Well, to answer that question we're not going
to be able to look strictly at history, because there isn't a written record about a lot of
these things. But thanks to archaeology and paleobiology, we CAN look deep into the past.
Let's go to the Thought Bubble. So fifteen thousand years ago, humans were
foragers and hunters. Foraging meant gathering fruits, nuts, also wild grains and grasses;
hunting allowed for a more protein-rich diet ... so long as you could find something with
meat to kill. By far the best hunting gig in the pre-historic world incidentally was
fishing, which is one of the reasons that if you look at history of people populating
the planet, we tended to run for the shore and then stay there. Marine life was:
A) abundant, and B) relatively unlikely to eat you. While we tend to think that the life of foragers
were nasty, brutish and short, fossil evidence suggests that they actually had it pretty
good: their bones and teeth are healthier than those of agriculturalists. And anthropologists
who have studied the remaining forager peoples have noted that they actually spend a lot
fewer hours working than the rest of us and they spend more time on art, music, and storytelling.
Also if you believe the classic of anthropology, NISA, they also have a lot more time for skoodilypooping.
What? I call it skoodilypooping. I'm not gonna apologize. It's worth noting that cultivation of crops
seems to have risen independently over the course of milennia in a number of places ... from
Africa to China to the Americas ... using crops that naturally grew nearby: rice in
Southeast Asia, maize in in Mexico, potatoes in the Andes, wheat in the Fertile Crescent,
yams in West Africa. People around the world began to abandon their foraging for agriculture.
And since so many communities made this choice independently, it must have been a good choice
... right? Even though it meant less music and skoodilypooping. Thanks, Thought Bubble. All right, to answer that question, let's take a look
at the advantages and disadvantages of agriculture. Advantage: Controllable food supply. You might
have droughts or floods, but if you're growing the crops and breeding them to be hardier,
you have a better chance of not starving. Disadvantage: In order to keep feeding people
as the population grows you have to radically change the environment of the planet. Advantage: Especially if you grow grain, you
can create a food surplus, which makes cities possible and also the specialization of labor.
Like, in the days before agriculture, EVERYBODY'S job was foraging, and it took about a thousand
calories of work to create a thousand calories of food ... and it was impossible to create
large population centers. But, if you have a surplus agriculture can
support people not directly involved in the production of food. Like, for instance, tradespeople,
who can devote their lives to better farming equipment which in turn makes it easier to
produce more food more efficiently which in time makes it possible for a corporation to turn a
profit on this ninety-nine cent double cheeseburger. Which is delicious, by the way. It's actually
terrible. And it's very cold. And I wish I had not eaten it. I mean, can we just compare
what I was promised to what I was delivered? Yeah, thank you. Yeah, this is not that. Some would say that large and complex agricultural
communities that can support cities and eventually inexpensive meat sandwiches are not necessarily
beneficial to the planet or even to its human inhabitants. Although that's a bit of a tough
argument to make, coming to you as I am in a series of ones and zeros. ADVANTAGE: Agriculture can be practiced all
over the world, although in some cases it takes extensive manipulation of the environment,
like y'know irrigation, controlled flooding, terracing, that kind of thing. DISADVANTAGE: Farming is hard. So hard in
fact that one is tempted to claim ownership over other humans and then have them till
the land on your behalf, which is the kind of non-ideal social order that tends to be
associated with agricultural communities. So why did agriculture happen? Wait, I haven't talked about herders. Herders,
man! Always getting the short end of the stick. Herding is a really good and interesting alternative
to foraging and agriculture. You domesticate some animals and then you take them on the
road with you. The advantages of herding are obvious. First, you get to be a cowboy. Also,
animals provide meat and milk, but they also help out with shelter because they can provide
wool and leather. The downside is that you have to move around
a lot because your herd always needs new grass, which makes it hard to build cities, unless
you are the Mongols. [music, horse hooves] By the way, over the next forty weeks you
will frequently hear generalizations, followed by "unless you are the Mongols" [music, hooves]. But anyway one of the main reasons herding
only caught on in certain parts of the world is that there aren't that many animals that
lend themselves to domestication. Like, you have sheep, goats, cattle, pigs, horses, camels,
donkeys, reindeer, water buffalo, yaks, all of which have something in common. They aren't
native to the Americas. The only halfway useful herding animal native to the Americas is the
llama. No, not that Lama, two l's. Yes, that llama. Most animals just don't work for domestication.
Like hippos are large, which means they provide lots of meat, but unfortunately, they like
to eat people. Zebras are too ornery. Grizzlies have wild hearts that can't be broken. Elephants
are awesome, but they take way too long to breed. Which reminds me! It's time for the
Open Letter. Elegant. But first, let's see what the Secret
Compartment has for me today. Oh! It's another double cheeseburger. Thanks, Secret Compartment.
Just kidding, I don't thank you for this. An Open Letter to elephants. Hey elephants, You're so cute and smart and awesome.
Why you gotta be pregnant for 22 months? That's crazy! And then you only have one kid. If
you were more like cows, you might have taken us over by now. Little did you know, but the greatest
evolutionary advantage: being useful to humans. Like here is a graph of cow population, and
here is a graph of elephant population. Elephants, if you had just inserted yourself into human
life the way cows did, you could have used your power and intelligence to form secret
elephant societies, conspiring against the humans! And then you could have risen up,
and destroyed us, and made an awesome elephant world with elephant cars, and elephant planes! It would have been so great! But noooo! You
gotta be pregnant for 22 months and then have just one kid. It's so annoying! Best wishes, John Green. Right, but back to the agricultural revolution
and why it occurred. Historians don't know for sure, of course, because there are no
written records. But, they love to make guesses. Maybe population pressure necessitated agriculture
even though it was more work, or abundance gave people leisure to experiment with domestication
or planting originated as a fertility rite - or as some historians have argued - people needed
to domesticate grains in order to produce more alcohol. Charles Darwin, like most 19th century scientists,
believed agriculture was an accident, saying, "a wild and unusually good variety of native
plant might attract the attention of some wise old savage." Off topic, but you will
note in the coming weeks that the definition of "savage" tends to be be "not me." Maybe the best theory is that there wasn't
really an agricultural revolution at all, but that agriculture came out of an evolutionary
desire to eat more. Like early hunter gatherers knew that seeds germinate when planted. And,
when you find something that makes food, you want to do more of it. Unless it's this food.
Then you want to do less of it. I kinda want to spit it out. Eww. Ah, that's much better. So early farmers would find the most accessible
forms of wheat and plant them and experiment with them not because they were trying to
start an agricultural revolution, because they were like, you know what would be awesome:
MORE food! Like on this topic, we have evidence that
more than 13,000 years ago humans in southern Greece were domesticating snails. In the Franchthi
Cave, there's a huge pile of snail shells, most of them are larger than current snails,
suggesting that the people who ate them were selectively breeding them to be bigger and
more nutritious. Snails make excellent domesticated food sources,
by the way because A) surprisingly caloric
B) they're easy to carry since they come with their own suitcases, and
C) to imprison them you just have to scratch a ditch around their living quarters. That's not really a revolution, that's just
people trying to increase available calories. But one non-revolution leads to another, and
pretty soon you have this, as far as the eye can see. Many historians also argue that without agriculture
we wouldn't have all the bad things that come with complex civilizations like patriarchy,
inequality, war, and unfortunately, famine. And, as far as the planet is concerned, agriculture
has been a big loser. Without it, humans never would have changed the environment so much,
building dams, and clearing forests, and more recently, drilling for oil that we can turn
into fertilizer. Many people made the choice for agriculture
independently, but does that mean it was the right choice? Maybe so, and maybe not, but,
regardless, we can't unmake that choice. And that's one of the reasons I think it's so
important to study history. History reminds us that revolutions are not
events so much as they are processes; that for tens of thousands of years people have
been making decisions that irrevocably shaped the world that we live in today. Just as today
we are making subtle, irrevocable decisions that people of the future will remember as
revolutions. Next week we're going to journey to the Indus
River Valley - whoa - very fragile, our globe, like the real globe. We're going to travel
to the Indus River Valley. I'll see you then. Crash Course is produced and directed by Stan
Muller. Our script supervisor is Danica Johnson. The show is written by my high school history
teacher, Raoul Meyer, and myself, and our graphics team is Thought Bubble. If you want to guess at the phrase of the
week, you can do so in comments. You can also suggest future phrases of the week. And if
you have a question about today's video, please leave it comments where our team of semi-professional
quasi-historians will aim to answer it. Thanks for watching, and as we say in my hometown,
Don't Forget To Be Awesome.