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Adeline Masquelier is professor of anthropology at Tulare University. She is the coeditor of Critical Terms for the Study of Africa, also published by the University of Chicago Press.

Comprend les noms: Adeline Marie Masquelier

Œuvres de Adeline Masquelier

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Summary: While a lot of cultural anthropology focuses on clothing and body ornamentation as signifiers of cultural significance, the actual body itself can also carry a lot of meaning. This book is a series of essays which examine the forms and meaning of nakedness, nudity (not the same thing), hygiene, and filth in a variety of different cultures.

Review: I am going to do something here that I pretty much never do: stop reading a book without finishing it. I am a compulsive finisher, even of books I'm not particularly enjoying, but there are rare occasions when I make an exception, and this book is going to be one of them. This is not at all a reflection of the quality of the book; I'm sure it's fine, although I am not really a qualified judge. It's just that this book is way, way over my head; it's addressed to an academic audience at a level that my two-courses-shy-of-an-anthropology-major-but-that-was-a-few-years-ago self just can't match. The introduction almost broke me, and while the essay-and-a-half I read were better, they were still a little too abstruse for me. In the future, I think my anthropology reading is going to have to be consigned to works that are more descriptive than analytical: more ethnographies geared towards the layperson and fewer critical/academic essays for the professional.

Recommendation: The topic is generally interesting, but this book is not really accessible to anyone without specialized knowledge in the field.
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fyrefly98 | 1 autre critique | Sep 5, 2008 |

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Œuvres
5
Membres
56
Popularité
#291,557
Évaluation
4.0
Critiques
4
ISBN
15

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