Lines in the Water: Nature and Culture at Lake Titicaca
G**S
Feel-Good Ethnography
This ethnography is quite literary with lots of anecdotes and popular song narratives. However, it also deals quite seriously with contemporary environmental issues like invasive species, biological diversity and the rights of subsistence communities. I recommend taking it to the beach or assigning it in an undergraduate seminar.
Y**I
Four Stars
Loved the book, it was assigned reading for my anthropology class. I ended up really liking the book.
D**O
hey!
do yourself a favor and read this book! it will help you look at sustainability and culture in a new light!
T**N
Bloody boring book unless you are specifically into the anthropology of ...
Bloody boring book unless you are specifically into the anthropology of the indigenous people of the Andes and their fishing habits.
R**R
Excellent
(Planeta.com Journal) -- Lines in the Water (University of California Press, 2002), a beautifully written ethnography of rural fishermen and their families. The book's subtitle "Nature and Culture at Lake Titicaca" specifies the center of action, but the scope is much broader and deeper. It's actually hard to find the words to say how delightful this book is. Author Ben Orlove is an environmental science professor at the University of California, Davis, and his book is based on three decades of trips to Peru and Bolivia. The book is a showcase of fresh writing and a major contribution to the literature about South America. Orlove provides a frank account of the role academics themselves play. He includes himself in this story and shares candid observations -- from his reactions to office politics to daydreaming about museums. This book is highly recommended. Eco travelers visiting Lake Titicaca would do well to read this book in advance.
L**N
A gem of a cross-disciplinary book
This is a gem, written with great respect for the indigenous people who live aound Lake Titicaca, well-annotated and with wonderful photographs by the author. Orlove has broad interests - anthropology, economics, natural history, environmental issues, to name a few, and a talent for accessing interesting memories. He conveys his astute observations in clear and vivid prose.The book is organized nicely - I especially liked the material in the final chapter, entitled "Paths", which offers an antidote to the sad fact that roads and highways are so often destructive to local people and to biodiversity. Paths, literal or metaphorical, also provide valuable linkages and essential connections among the various components of this remote but very interesting and community with ancient roots. Orlove provides the reader with a sense of having traveled those paths for a short while with him.
Trustpilot
2 months ago
2 months ago