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Anthropology and the Bushman PDF

190 Pages·2007·0.74 MB·English
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Anthro & Bushman 4/3/07 9:18 am Page i Anthropology and the Bushman Anthro & Bushman 4/3/07 9:18 am Page ii Anthro & Bushman 4/3/07 9:18 am Page iii Anthropology and the Bushman Alan Barnard Oxford • New York Anthro & Bushman 4/3/07 9:18 am Page iv First published in 2007 by Berg Editorial offices: 1st Floor, Angel Court, 81 St Clements Street, Oxford, OX4 1AW, UK 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10010, USA © Alan Barnard 2007 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the written permission of Berg. Berg is the imprint of Oxford International Publishers Ltd. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Barnard, Alan (Alan J.) Anthropology and the bushman / Alan Barnard. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN-13: 978-1-84520-428-0 (cloth) ISBN-10: 1-84520-428-X (cloth) ISBN-13: 978-1-84520-429-7 (pbk.) ISBN-10: 1-84520-429-8 (pbk.) 1. San (African people)—Kalahari Desert—Social life and customs. 2. Ethnology—Kalahari Desert—Field work. 3. Anthropology in popular culture—Kalahari Desert. 4. Kalahari Desert—Social life and customs. I. Title. DT1058.S36B35 2007 305.896’1—dc22 2006101698 British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. ISBN 978 1 84520 428 0 (Cloth) ISBN 978 1 84520 429 7 (Paper) Typeset by Avocet Typeset, Chilton, Aylesbury, Bucks Printed in the United Kingdom by Biddles Ltd, King’s Lynn www.bergpublishers.com Anthro & Bushman 4/3/07 9:18 am Page v Contents List of Figures and Tables vii Preface ix 1 Introduction 1 2 From Early Encounters to Early Anthropology 11 3 Victorian Visions of the Bushman 23 4 Beckoning of the Kalahari 39 5 Amateurs and Cultural Ecologists 53 6 An Original Affluent Society? 67 7 The Return of Myth and Symbol 83 8 Kalahari Revisionism and Portrayals of Contact 97 9 Advocacy,Development and Partnership 113 10 Representations and Self-representations 129 11 Reflections and Conclusions 143 References 149 Index 171 Anthro & Bushman 4/3/07 9:18 am Page vi Anthro & Bushman 4/3/07 9:18 am Page vii Figures and Tables Figures 1.1 Migration routes of the Khoe-speaking peoples 7 Tables 1.1 Click sounds in the two most common systems 9 Anthro & Bushman 4/3/07 9:18 am Page viii Anthro & Bushman 4/3/07 9:18 am Page ix Preface ‘The Bushman’ is an image that remains in anthropological consciousness, although transformed through history, especially in recent decades. This book is a social and intellectual history of that image as handed down to anthropology from earlier anthropologists and archaeologists, social theorists and travellers, and Bushmen and Khoekhoe themselves. It is also an exploration of the diversity of that image, for its appearance changes in space as well as time. ‘The Bushman’in contemporary South Africa can be quite different from ‘the Bushman’as under- stood in Japanese or American writings. One disclaimer: although it has quite a lot of references and covers a long period, this is not intended to be ‘the great big book of Bushman studies’. That would take many volumes, each (going backwards in time) probably of interest to fewer and fewer readers. My hope instead is to provide something more readable. My focus is on anthropologists and anthropology, but what is said here should, I hope, be of interest to a much wider public. It may be of interest especially to development practitioners, to scholars in related disciplines such as archaeology and history, and to those of Khoisan descent who simply want to know more about anthropology’s involvement in their heritage. Unless clearly essential for my sense, I shall dispense with quotation marks on words like ‘Bushman’throughout. The word is certainly not without its problems. Indeed the same can be said for the currently more politically correct term ‘San’, which historically and in the Khoekhoe dialects in which it is found has carried con- notations of poverty, low status, thievery and scavenging, as well as purposeful food- gathering (that being perhaps its most literal translation). ‘Khoisan’today is a word that includes both the ‘San’ hunter-gatherers and the ‘Khoikhoi’ or ‘Khoekhoe’ herder-hunter-gatherers. Most of this book concerns the former and those anthro- pologists who have worked with them, although throughout much of the history of these studies, especially in early times, the place of the ‘herders’has been integral to the definition of the ‘hunters’. In general, Khoisan names are given in the preferred form of the individuals themselves or, where appropriate, in a simplified Khoisan form rather than a European one – for example, /Han≠kass’o rather than Klein Jantje (the various click symbols are explained in Chapter 1). I should add that there are many Japanese anthropologists among today’s Bushman experts, and their names are given in Western form, with given name first and family name last.

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