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The Language of the Land: Living Among a Stone-Age People in Africa
 
 
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The Language of the Land: Living Among a Stone-Age People in Africa [Englisch] [Taschenbuch]

James Stephenson
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Produktinformation

  • Taschenbuch: 256 Seiten
  • Verlag: St Martin's Press; Auflage: Reprint (Oktober 2001)
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • ISBN-10: 0312284365
  • ISBN-13: 978-0312284367
  • Größe und/oder Gewicht: 22,4 x 17,9 x 1,6 cm
  • Durchschnittliche Kundenbewertung: 4.0 von 5 Sternen  Alle Rezensionen anzeigen (1 Kundenrezension)
  • Amazon Bestseller-Rang: Nr. 1.362.583 in Englische Bücher (Siehe Top 100 in Englische Bücher)

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James Stephenson
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Produktbeschreibungen

Pressestimmen

"As in the best travel literature, the account of the physical journey in The Language of the Land becomes a voyage of the self...Stephenson treats readers to a memorable portrait of the Hadzabe, a shy people who relish the moment, do not understand greed, and manifest profound reverence for nature and their ancestors...With alluring descriptions of nature and an inspiring depiction of this ancient tribe, he will likely provoke readers into a new respect for remote corners of the earth, where people still understand 'the language of the land' --"New York Times"
"Extraordinary...a fine book marked by its deep respect for these people, who still hunt with bows and arrows, still speak to their ancestor spirits." --"National Geographic Adventure"
"One of the most eye-opening, enjoyable, and inspiring books you'll ever read."
--metrotimes.com
"This fascinating account is told with wit, warmth, and great respect." -"-African Sun Times"

Kurzbeschreibung

At the age of 27, James Stephenson arranged to spend a year among the Hadzabe - the last hunters and gatherers living a traditional life in Africa. There are some 2000 Hadzabe living around Lake Eyasi which is situated within the great East African Rift Valley. The Hadzabe speak their own district language and bone findings indicate that they may be the direct descendants of the early humans who lived on the same land some three million years ago. Stephenson wanted to live their life, hunting what they hunted, eating what they ate, participating in their dances and ceremonies, consulting with their medicine men and learning their myths and dreams. Armed only with his camera, his art supplied and the open-hearted courage of youth, he set out to live with a people who have changed little since the Stone Age, to glimpse the world as they perceived it, and to learn the wisdom they had wrested from the land. The Language of the Land is Stephenson's experience; laid out in evocative prose and illustrated with incredible photographs.

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In the windy late afternoon, I walked up the hill to Sitoti's bird-nest home after the long trip from Arusha. Lesen Sie die erste Seite
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Stephenson hat in dem Jahr bei den Hadzabe sehr tiefe Einblicke in das Leben der Menschen erhalten und erzählt dies auf eine sehr fesselnde und informative Weise. Er nennt aber Personen und Dinge beim Namen die vielleicht nicht für die Öffentlichkeit gedacht sind und macht dieses Buch von moralischer Seite ein wenig bedenklich. Die geschilderte Gruppe der Hadzabe lebt heute noch genau wie 1997 in diesem Gebiet und die genannten Personen sind noch immer am Leben. "Private" und "vertrauliche" Dinge über sie zu lesen macht das Buch sehr spannend und einfühlsam, ist aber den Menschen gegenüber nicht korrekt, die sicherlich nicht von dieser Tatsache wissen.
Nichtsdestotrotz ist das Buch sehr lesenswert und auch ein wertvolles Zeitdokument eines Volkes das als eines der Letzten noch als Wildbeuter lebt. Wie lange noch?
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Africa awaits you... 9. September 2000
Von glbrackett - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
James Stephenson combines an extarodinary adventure with a poetic sensibility in this work that is rare indeed. Interested readers will find _The Language of the Land_ a window to a world as old and as sacred as human memory itself, simultaneously intimate and expansive. I found myself laughing at the exploits of James and the hunters Mustaffa and Sabina and others in their wild celebrations after the hunts, short of breath on the safaris where they passed within feet of lions and warned them off with medicine, and completely caught up in the intricate, tattered tapestry of Africa Mr. Stephenson reveals here.

This book is beautifully produced, and Mr. Stephenson's narrative is combined with photographs of the African bush outsiders will never, one hopes, actually ever see. It also combines what surely must be the first ever collaborative art between a Westerner and the Hadzabe, several works of which are included in a stunning portfolio of color plates at the end of the book.

If you have an interest in human history, Africa and its peoples, strong poetic prose, or a story which is piercingly important at this point in our world, then you need to get this book, read and experience it, and then pass it on to your children.

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Do you dream of Africa? 6. Februar 2001
Von Beverly Army Williams - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
I owe James Stephenson a mighty big thank you. He gave me an all-expenses paid trip to Africa, and he's willing to give you one, too. No, he's not chartering planes for random winners of some unknown sweepstake. In this sometimes landscape artist, sometimes explorer's wonderful book, The Language of the Land: Living Among the Hadzabe in Africa, he shares the experiences of his life for nearly a year when he plunged into the jungle of East Africa and lived among the Hadzabe. Often mystical, Stephenson's adventure stems from joining with these hunters as they live, sharing in their ceremonies, following their rules.

The Language of the Land burgeons with fascinating photos. I finished the book feeling like I knew the people and the land, not only because of the tale that kept me from putting the book down until I finished it, but also because of the pictures that I studied, mesmerized. As an unexpected bonus, a portfolio of paintings by Stephenson and the Hadzabe awaits the reader in the back of the book.

I received The Language of the Land as a gift from a thoughtful friend who knows that I am anxious for the day when I can visit Africa to smell the air there and learn about the world that I imagine to be so different from my own. This book both teased me, increasing my desire to see Africa, and appeased me, satisfying, if only temporarily, my longing for adventure.

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Jemsi's Arrow Misses the Mark 9. April 2001
Von dmurphy@codh.org - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
James Stephenson's (known as Jemsi to the Hadzabe) book cannot be called unique, but certainly deserves the title of unusual. In the tradition of Kabloona, a white man blends moves in with a tribe, eats what they eat, dances what they dance, sings what they sing. Unless it is raining and uncomfortable, then he goes to Zanzibar for a sex and drug odyssey until the weather where the Hadzabe live improves a bit.

Without a doubt Jemsi has achieved a deeper knowledge of the Hadzabe than any other American. While Jemsi absorbed first hand knowledge of their songs, rituals, and sacred places, he exchanged with them confabulatory tales of America, a place inhabited with bears that fly and have sex with humans. Explaining that he felt that he should imitate the "tall tale" method of story telling used by the Hadzabe, his gift for the knowledge that was given freely to him by the tribe was a few goats, some cornmeal, a few good drinking bouts on the house, and what some might call outright lies about Jemsi's own American culture.

Noting the devastating effect that alcohol was having on the Hadzabe, Jemsi's response was to freely participate in the drinking binges, even supplying the cash that made the binges possible on some occasions. Put into an American context, it would be interesting to see how the enthusiastic reviewers of this book would feel about a European that came to America to have an "experience", moved in with an Indian tribe, slept with their women without regard to possible offspring, and actively abetted the alcoholism that so devastates some Native American tribes.

Bottom line? A fabulous tale is marred by the narcissism of the author. Stephenson's behavior while staying with the Hadzabe is indistiguishable to me from the behavior of Western explorers for centuries: enjoy what the native culture has to offer to the fullest, but offer little (alcohol, crayons, and paints in this case) in return. Written passably, but not strikingly, well, excellently illustrated with photos and drawings, the book still satisfies anyone that wishes to glimpse a usually hidden corner of the African continent.

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