Archive for anthropology

More on Veiled Sentiments

So I finished the book Veiled Sentiments last week and was thoroughly surprised at how well written it is. It’s the first ethnography that I’ve read in a while, if not ever, that’s written to be read by a normal lay man. Aside from a myriad of oft-redefined Awlad ‘Ali dialectical terms, it doesn’t contain the usual obscuring language of anthropology. Ms. Abu-Lughod succeeded in making this book and the lives of these Bedouin extremely accessible to anyone who’s curious.

That being said, I will probably buy her follow up book called Writing Women’s Worlds. This book was written roughly a decade after her original research in the Western Desert and takes place with the same tribe. I think it would be interesting to see how much has changed socially in that passing decade.

The paper I had to write on the book is simply abysmal but it seems I wasn’t the only one. Practically everyone else in class had the same problem I did with the topic. This was essentially a book report that could be backed up by some research but the lives of these people are so complex to Westerners, it’s quite tough to cram 260 pages into 5 pages. Almost everyone loved the book, that was overwhelmingly apparent but everyone suffered the same issue with the bounty of the subject at hand. Hopefully I’ll get a decent grade that I can more than easily make up for with our next two papers.

New Four Stone Hearth

The new Four Stone Hearth is up at Hominin Dental Anthropology. Oh, this is going to make a sweet read at work tomorrow.

New Four Stone Hearth

The new Four Stone is up at Anthropology 2.0. Let the archaeology and anthropology love begin!