Titel
Ceremony. An Anthropologist's Misadventures in the African Bush.
Schrijver
Barley, Nigel
Taal
Engels
ISBN
9780805012453
Uitgever
Owl Book, Henry Holt and Company Inc. New York
Prijs
€ 15,00(Excl. verzendkosten)
Bijzonderheden
1990, first Owl book edition, 159 pp., paperback, incl. b/w pictures, slight wear of cover, furtheron condition good
Meer info
Originally published under the title: A Plague of Caterpillars: A Return to the African Bush.
When the alien culture begins to feel normal, it is time for the field anthropologist to go home, says Barley of the British Museum. It appears that he departed just in time. For a year and a half Barley had studied a mountain tribe, the Dowayo, in northern Cameroon. Back in London, he had word that the tribe's circumcision ceremony was imminent (this elaborate ritual occurs only at six- or seven-year intervals), so he returned. As he waited in the village for confirmation, he heard of a tribe, the Ninga, whose men had no nipples. Expecting to find a people that practiced ritual removal of male breasts, he simply found a family with birth defects. He joined the Dowayo men on a remarkably inept hunt, visited the rain-chief, learned to flute-whistle. Barley saw other Westerners on occasiona black American anthropologist who wanted to be a "real" African, a missionary who had just discovered solar energy, a German U.N. employee showing health films. But Barley was thwarted in his efforts to observe the circumcision rites: great, hairy caterpillars destroyed the millet cropno millet, no beer, no ceremony. This is a vastly entertaining story that abounds with characters; it is also a serious perusal of the ethics of anthropology. Photos.
Copyright 1986 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
Ceremony is not, strictly speaking, an ethnography, though it contains enough information to piece together the world-view and some of the customs of the Dowayos of Northern Cameroon. The work appears more as an edited journal, mixing observations, the trials and tribulations of fieldwork, and some astute remarks on the nature of anthropology. The book is entertaining and quite accessible to the general reader, though it will not satisfy professionals in the field. As for the "ceremony" alluded to in the title, it remained elusive, a plague of caterpillarsand perhaps also the inevitable changes happening in even remote African villageshaving seemingly postponed the circumcision rituals which would have transformed Dowayo boys into men. Winifred Lambrecht, Anthropology Dept., Brown Univ., Providence, R.I.
Copyright 1986 Reed Business Information, Inc.
When the alien culture begins to feel normal, it is time for the field anthropologist to go home, says Barley of the British Museum. It appears that he departed just in time. For a year and a half Barley had studied a mountain tribe, the Dowayo, in northern Cameroon. Back in London, he had word that the tribe's circumcision ceremony was imminent (this elaborate ritual occurs only at six- or seven-year intervals), so he returned. As he waited in the village for confirmation, he heard of a tribe, the Ninga, whose men had no nipples. Expecting to find a people that practiced ritual removal of male breasts, he simply found a family with birth defects. He joined the Dowayo men on a remarkably inept hunt, visited the rain-chief, learned to flute-whistle. Barley saw other Westerners on occasiona black American anthropologist who wanted to be a "real" African, a missionary who had just discovered solar energy, a German U.N. employee showing health films. But Barley was thwarted in his efforts to observe the circumcision rites: great, hairy caterpillars destroyed the millet cropno millet, no beer, no ceremony. This is a vastly entertaining story that abounds with characters; it is also a serious perusal of the ethics of anthropology. Photos.
Copyright 1986 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
Ceremony is not, strictly speaking, an ethnography, though it contains enough information to piece together the world-view and some of the customs of the Dowayos of Northern Cameroon. The work appears more as an edited journal, mixing observations, the trials and tribulations of fieldwork, and some astute remarks on the nature of anthropology. The book is entertaining and quite accessible to the general reader, though it will not satisfy professionals in the field. As for the "ceremony" alluded to in the title, it remained elusive, a plague of caterpillarsand perhaps also the inevitable changes happening in even remote African villageshaving seemingly postponed the circumcision rituals which would have transformed Dowayo boys into men. Winifred Lambrecht, Anthropology Dept., Brown Univ., Providence, R.I.
Copyright 1986 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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