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Reviews for Anancy In The Great House, Vol. 136

 Anancy In The Great House magazine reviews

The average rating for Anancy In The Great House, Vol. 136 based on 2 reviews is 4 stars.has a rating of 4 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2017-03-12 00:00:00
1990was given a rating of 5 stars Ron Minor
Whew, I haven't read all the way through one of these dense, anthropological texts since college!! At times, it feels like wading rough setting cement; the language is very technical and repetitive, very much in the manner of traditional anthropology texts. However, the book is incredibly detailed and well-informed, drawing upon primary sources and face to face interviews. The author lived with her subjects, participated in rituals with them as observer and assistant. This book is the work of many, many years of dedicated observation and thoughtful analysis. It is necessary reading for anyone who wants to gain a deeper understanding of the Mapuche - the dominant indigenous people of Chile - and their world views and their difficult place within and outside of the Chilean nation. And it is a fascinating, detailed, and nuanced account of the evolving role and activities of machi (shamans) among the Mapuche in Chile.
Review # 2 was written on 2013-11-19 00:00:00
1990was given a rating of 3 stars Mr John William Scollen
As one who has recently published a historical novel about the sixteenth century Spanish invasion of the land now called Chile, I have read over the years pretty much everything written on the aboriginal Mapuche, and as much as I could find about their culture, past and present. Unfortunately, this remarkable book was published late in my research on my novel, in which a sixteenth century machi is central. Early accounts of the Mapuche by the Spaniards describe some machi as homosexual, a heinous sin at the time. Bacigalupe's complex, rich and nuanced explanation of the spiritual sexuality of modern machi corrects, in my eyes, the blindered vision of the zealots of a time and place in which the priests were the scholars. It is worth pointing out that the cover of the book depicts a male Mapuche machi, or shaman, dressed as a woman. This is definitely not light reading, but Shamans of the Foye Tree should be fascinating to anyone interested in gender studies, shamanism in general, and in particular, the Mapuche.


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