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M**E
Textbook
I don't love this book but that is probably because I didn't like the class it was associated with. The book itself was informational, but I never would have read or cared about it if I didn't have to read it. It is focused around the people of Peru that Catherine has lived with. I wouldn't consider it a textbook, but that was how it was used for me. Not necessarily a recreational read either...
I**Y
Interesting. Bought For A College Class.
Bought this for a college course I was taking ... this is a great place to purchase textbooks, I saved so much money! Books arrived very quickly and exactly as described. No complaints here!
L**B
I'd recommend it just to get a beautiful peak into another ...
Had to get this book for a class. By the time I finished it I was in tears over the changes in Sonqo and the natural progression of live. I see everything and everyone differently now. I'd recommend it just to get a beautiful peak into another life and time.
K**E
Great book!
The Hold Life Has is a great example of ethnographic research. Perfect for an undergraduate anthropology class. Allen is interesting and engaging and provides great examples of anthropological concepts typically introduced to students in lower level anthro courses. Loved it!
C**R
required reading
this book was not too engaging. we had to read it for a class i took, and i wasnt as interested in it as i hoped to be.
G**Y
Not straight forward
Confusing
J**Y
but throughly enjoyed
Came in earlier than expected. Got it for school, but throughly enjoyed it
K**Y
The best available book on Q'ero
This is a wonderful book written by an anthropologist who spent several years in an isolated Andean ayllu (community) located a good number of miles from the provincial center of Colquepata. The attraction of this book is that, unlike most authors responsible for the ever proliferating literature on Andean peoples and their practices, Allen actually lived with the Indians, participated in their ceremonies, potato planting, festivals and travels. The book provides priceless descriptions of the labor divisions between men, women and children and of the interactions between the runa (i.e., Qechua for "people") themselves, between the runa and the city-dwelling mestizos and, perhaps most poignantly, between the people and the land. The land for the Andean peasant is a living breathing organism that needs to be loved, feared and placated with gifts. Each and every horizon marker has a personality, every hill possesses power and there are spirit beings inhabiting different "power spots" from the time immemorial. The interactions between the people, the ancestors, the spirits and the land are part of the reality that needs to be reinforced every single day through little rituals, such as greeting the sun as one steps out of the door early in the morning.Coca represented here part of the glue that held everything together. The rituals that underlie coca chewing bind people in a neverending cycle of mutual obligation; in addition, coca is used as a main ingredient of despachos (ritual offerings) and a source of quiet energy during exhaustive labor on potato fields. Unfortunately, as a result of the demand for processed coca, cocaine, in the US, and the resulting pressure on the Andean countries by coca dealers and foreign goverements alike, the Peruvian peasants have found their access to raw coca leaves (non-addictive) severely limited, which affects a crucial aspect of their culture and cultural identity.Allen depicts all these elements (and much much more) in a simple yet poignant narrative. Everything is exactly where it should be - she brings us close to the individual members of her extended ayllu so that the reader herself can participate. I found the frequent inserts of Quechua phrases especially useful, providing a direct link into the mode of the Andean thought.I highy recommend this book. probably the best one available, if you want to visit Qero regions in peru.
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