“Nisa: The Life and Words of a !Kung Woman” by Marjorie Shostak In the book, “Nisa: The Life and Words of a !Kung Woman,” written by Marjorie Shostak; is a culturally shocking and extremely touching book about a woman who had gone through many struggles and horrific tragedies in her life. This book also emphasizes the perspective of most of the women in the society. There are many striking issues in this book that the people of the !Kung tribe go through. Marjorie Shostak, an anthropologist who had written this book had studies the !Kung tribe for two years. Shostak had spent the two years interviewing the women in the society. The !Kung tribe resided n the Dobe area of Northwest Botswana, that’s infused with a series of clicks, represented on paper by exclamation points and slashes. Shostak had studied that the people of the tribe relied mostly on nuts of the mongongo, which is from an indigenous tree that’s part of their diet. Shostak, out of all the women in the tribe had made close connections with a fifty year old woman with the name of Nisa. The woman, Nisa, is what the book is about. The book is written in Nisa’s point of view of her life experiences while growing up in that type of society. Nisa’s willingness to speak in the interviews about her childhood and her life gave Shostak a solid basis on what to write her book on. Nisa’s life was filled with tragedies. She had gone through certain situations where Nisa loses two of her children as infants and two as adults. She had also lost her husband soon after the birth of one of their children. According to Shostak, “None of the women had experiences as much tragedy as Nisa…” (Shostak, 351). Shostak, when interviewing Nisa, considers that in the beginning of the book, Nisa seems to exaggerate the stories from when she was an infant. Although the stories are exaggerated by Nisa, a lot of women can relate to her life even with the geographic distance between them or if the society is completely different. Women of the same age can relate to Nisa, or if they went through the same situations like her. Certain women, even in America, have gone through a situation where they had to bury their own child or if they have lost a husband. This book had first started out by introducing the readers to what this book is going to sound like, which was the Introduction. Then once the introduction was read, Shostak had written it in a way that the book is in Nisa’s point of view. Nisa had her own words in the book talking about her life as an infant. As an infant, parents, in general, in the !Kung tribe are very focused on their children. The parents in that tribe make sure their children are healthy and nursed. One of the situations that occurred in Nisa’s life was in the beginning of the book when her little brother was on the way for delivery and Nisa had always cried since she was not being nursed. Every time Nisa had cried, her father had threatened to beat her and when that threat was made, she had to automatically be quiet or Nisa would tell her mother that her father was going to beat her. Telling her mother would help in a way because mothers also have an equal say in things in that type of society. Every person in that particular society has a say in things, and they are all equal. Because Nisa had cried every time, her mother, because Nisa was getting extremely skinny since she was not being nursed, her mother had delivered her son and had told Nisa to get a digging stick. When Nisa’s mother had asked for this, she started crying again and tried to convince her mother not to go through with the burial and to just nurse her little brother and not worry about herself. Not being able to convince her mother, Nisa had to walk all the way back into where there are people, crying on the way, a person had stopped her and was wondering what was wrong. When Nisa was stopped, she had told the person what her mother was going to do, and they both ran back to her mother and had stopped
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cultural traits of the assimilated group become indistinguishable. attitudes - data that describe how people think, believe, and feel. autoethnography - an ethnographic description written by a member of the culture. avunculocal - residence after marriage is with or near the mother's brother of the husband. B | Go To | A | B | C | D | E-F | G-H | I-L | M-N | O-R | S | T-V | W-Z | balanced reciprocity - is a direct exchange where the two parties involved seek to arrive at a mutually acceptable price…
McMaster University Social Sciences 2O03(e): Canadian Children Lecture Hall: MDCL 1305 Sept 8th to Dec. 5th 2011 Wednesday Evenings: 7:00 p.m. - 10:00 p.m. Professor G. Voros Office: KTH 217 Ext 27897 Office Hours: Fridays 10:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m. Meetings by appointment only The purpose of the course is to study the perceived versus the actual status of Canadian children within our society. A number of topics could be considered including the following. a) Introduction: The Historical Evolution…
how and why peoples today and in the recent past differ from each other in their customary ways of thinking and acting. Ethnology, then, is concerned with patterns of thought and behavior such as marriage customs kinship organization (how people know to whom they are related) political systems (tribes, bands, states, etc.) economic systems (trading systems, money, etc.) religion folk art music and the ways in which these patterns differ across recent and contemporary societies. Ethnologists also…