'Tambo: Life in an Andean VillagePerhaps the best way to sharpen one's power's of observation is to be a stranger in a strange land. Julia Meyerson was one such stranger during a year in the village of 'Tambo, Peru, where her husband was conducting anthropological fieldwork. Though sometimes overwhelmed by the differences between Quechua and North American culture, she still sought eagerly to understand the lifeways of 'Tambo and to find her place in the village. Her vivid observations, recorded in this field journal, admirably follow Henry James's advice: "Try to be one of the people upon whom nothing is lost." With an artist's eye, Meyerson records the daily life of 'Tambo—the cycles of planting and harvest, the round of religious and cultural festivals, her tentative beginnings of friendship and understanding with the Tambinos. The journal charts her progress from tolerated outsider to accepted friend as she and her husband learn and earn, the roles of daughter and son in their adopted family. With its wealth of ethnographic detail, especially concerning the lives of Andean women, 'Tambo will have great value for students of Latin American anthropology. In addition, scholars preparing to do fieldwork anywhere will find it a realistic account of both the hardships and the rewards of such study. |
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... potatoes cut by the kuti cannot be sold , though they can be used for soups for which raw potatoes are cut into pieces anyway , and they make fine food for the pigs — and the plant with its roots and tubers is pulled out of the soil and ...
... potatoes into the oven through the opening left in the side , and then pushed in part of the roof of the dome to pour in an armful of beans , still in their pods . She collapsed the entire structure over the vegetables and tubers and ...
... potatoes ) . We had spent a couple of days sorting the potatoes we'd harvested in K'airamayu into categories of size - some , the large ones , for papa wayk'u , medium - sized ones for seed , small ones and those cut by the kuti for ...