Older, Further, Stranger: A Podcast of the Possible Past

Episode 4: The Few, The Proud

1 h 25 min · 11 de feb de 2026
Portada del episodio Episode 4: The Few, The Proud

Descripción

How do small-scale societies organize the labor, knowledge, and coordination required to build things that seem to belong to empires? In this episode, we travel across continents and millennia to examine monuments that challenge our assumptions about hierarchy, population, and power. From the earliest ritual architecture to island societies shaping stone and reef, from desert landscapes engineered through repetition to bridges rebuilt generation after generation, we explore how communities achieved feats of construction without the centralized states we often assume are necessary. Rather than telling a simple story of progress toward civilization, these sites reveal a world full of experiments in how people chose to live, gather, build, and remember.

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episode Older, Further, Stranger, Episode 7: Technologies of Freedom artwork

Older, Further, Stranger, Episode 7: Technologies of Freedom

Technologies of Freedom: Nine cases. Nine thousand years. Five continents.   The Cossacks building a steppe assembly with no hereditary rulers. The Maroons synthesizing African, indigenous Caribbean, and European knowledge in the mountains of Jamaica and Suriname. The pastoralists of East Africa developing a mobile sovereignty around cattle. The sea nomads of Southeast Asia choosing water as a zone beyond state control. The Zomians engineering societies to stay outside the reach of lowland kingdoms. The camel nomads transforming the Arabian desert into a protected highway. The Comanche expanding from a Great Basin people to an empire across the southern plains. The wōkōu—embargoed merchants turned raiders—of the Ming coast. And the Roma, whose thousand-year diaspora toolkit became, in the twentieth century, a catastrophic vulnerability.   These are people who looked at the organizing systems around them—empires, dynasties, plantation economies, sea bans, enclosures, caste hierarchies—and assembled from whatever was available a completely different way of living. Not freedom as an abstraction. Freedom as a set of practical tools: specific animals, specific landscapes, specific bodies of knowledge, specific social structures woven together into working alternatives.   The archaeology is central. Bone measurements, seed assemblages, isotope ratios, ancient DNA, and language branching points keep producing evidence of something real, something sophisticated, something worth understanding on its own terms. These were not morality plays. The raids were real. The violence fell on real people. But they built something. And for a while, sometimes for centuries, it worked.

8 de jun de 20261 h 9 min
episode Episode 4: The Few, The Proud artwork

Episode 4: The Few, The Proud

How do small-scale societies organize the labor, knowledge, and coordination required to build things that seem to belong to empires? In this episode, we travel across continents and millennia to examine monuments that challenge our assumptions about hierarchy, population, and power. From the earliest ritual architecture to island societies shaping stone and reef, from desert landscapes engineered through repetition to bridges rebuilt generation after generation, we explore how communities achieved feats of construction without the centralized states we often assume are necessary. Rather than telling a simple story of progress toward civilization, these sites reveal a world full of experiments in how people chose to live, gather, build, and remember.

11 de feb de 20261 h 25 min