"Nina: Female Life and Words" by Marjorie Shostak by Marjorie Shostak "Nissa: Life and Speech! Gong Woman", "Maria Shostak" This is a shocking sense of women who experienced many struggles and terrible tragedies in life It is an impressive article. The book also highlights most women's views of society. There are many persuasive questions in this book, that is, the people of the Kung family experienced it. Marjorie Shostak, an anthropologist who wrote this book, studied the "Kung" family for two years.
* Nisa: Marjorie Shostak (photographer), Harvard Univ Pr's woman's life and words, (November 2000). This classic paperback is again - and completely from Harvard University Press. This book is the story of the life of Nisa, Nissa is a member of the hunter gatherer in the Kalahari desert in southern Africa. Tell her that Harvard anthropologist Marjorie Shostak, collaboration with Nissa, succeeded in breaking through a major barrier to language and culture, using his simple, emotional and lively words. This story It is a fascinating view of a wonderful woman.
"Nina: Female Life and Words" by Marjorie Shostak by Marjorie Shostak "Nissa: Life and Speech! Gong Woman", "Maria Shostak" This is a shocking sense of women who experienced many struggles and terrible tragedies in life It is an impressive article. The book also highlights most women's views of society. There are many persuasive questions in this book, that is, the people of the Kung family experienced it. Marjorie Shostak, an anthropologist who wrote this book, studied the "Kung" family for two years.
Kung's anthropological survey in the southern part of Africa has recently been done, indicating that women are not affected by the possession of men. Marjorie Shostak's study Nisa is particularly beneficial as the author allows it. Kan woman's Nisa talks for herself. Since Nassa abandoned her during pregnancy, she explained her struggle to pull her husband Bessa away. Besa later came back and Nisa wanted to bring him back, but she was already involved with Twi. Nisa to Besa, she said that she hoped for nothing to do with him anymore. "When Besa took us to Twana's head to seek tribal hearings," Nisa said to the anthropologist: