Pages: 304 (Hardcover) ISBN: 0224009931 Pub: Jonathan Cape Pub date: 1974-06-27 Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 733283
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Reader Reviews:Excellent (0/0 people found this helpful)This beautiful anthropoligical work told in a srory is extrenmle fascinating.THE FOREST PEOPLE echoes such works as USURPER AND OTHER STORIE, and SAN PEOPLE. I was completely captivated by this book, which is why I read it four times this winter. It is taking me a step forward in coming to terms with life's different perspectives. So good I cannot praise it enogh (2/2 people found this helpful)What can I say, this book just rocks. These are the real people of the forest. It helps if you are into nature and anthropology. In any case by the end of the book you will be. Easy to read and heart warming as one discovers what it means to live in harmony with the forest. Something we have all lost but can at least gain an insight in to. An important piece of work that will stand the test of time. Read it and remind yourself about the essence of things. A rare book of quality on a dwindling segment of humanity. (1/1 people found this helpful)A captivating glimpse into the otherwise little known about world of the forest pygmy. Turnbull's perceptive interest and indeed nosiness into the world of these people results in a glorious window looking into their lives - from mundane daily activities to elaborate ritual celebration. The descriptions of these people yield vivid pictures of individuals and their plight to survive, though after finishing the book, one is not left with a sense of this plight as being an arduous ordeal; indeed one has the quiet sense of contentment that these people cling to their existence because of the rich rewards that it brings to them, both socially and individually. Being accepted into the very heart of pygmy culture, Turnbull explores the relationships between the pygmies, the villagers from outside of the forest's protection, the animals and plants of the forest, and of the concept of the forest itself being the provider and guide for the pygmies. These relationships, beyond the ordinary concept of a 21st century Westerner, are brought home with a clarity that leaves one a sense of bewilderment that such people still exist, and joy that this very fact is indeed so. An excellent ethnography and an entertaining read. (3/3 people found this helpful)Turnbull's account of BaMbuti life is both emotive and informative, focusing on the lives of a small number of individuals the reader is brought into the lives of these people. It is well written and it is entirely possible to find oneself immeresed in the lives documented. The information is interesting and thought provoking and this ethnography is relevant and full of information for both anthropologists and all others interested in the peoples of the world. Similar ProductsBlood Relations Menstruation and the Origins of Culture Yanomamo: the Fierce People (Case Studies in Cultural Anthropology) The Mountain People Tunnel Kids Cultural Anthropology: A Contemporary Perspective CategoriesAmazon.co.uk places this book into the following categories:
Books -> Subjects -> Society, Politics & Philosophy -> Social Sciences -> Anthropology
Books -> Subjects -> Society, Politics & Philosophy -> Social Sciences -> Multicultural Studies -> Indigenous Peoples uk-shops -> Education Resources -> Books -> Social Sciences -> Anthropology uk-shops -> Education Resources -> Books -> Social Sciences -> Multicultural Studies -> Indigenous Peoples
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