The Maring people of Papua New Guinea had their first contact with a European just six years before geographer and anthropologist William C. Clarke arrived to spend a year living with them in 1964. By the 1990s, after years of storage in tropical climes, the photographs Clarke took in PNG had become fungus-ridden and faded. Computer technology was used to restore the photographs, a process that brought back not just visual images of tropical plants, red soil, and skin made shiny with oil, but the smell of moist earth and ...
Read More
The Maring people of Papua New Guinea had their first contact with a European just six years before geographer and anthropologist William C. Clarke arrived to spend a year living with them in 1964. By the 1990s, after years of storage in tropical climes, the photographs Clarke took in PNG had become fungus-ridden and faded. Computer technology was used to restore the photographs, a process that brought back not just visual images of tropical plants, red soil, and skin made shiny with oil, but the smell of moist earth and banana leaves singeing on hot rocks. Clarke was transported to a half-forgotten world, a world he brings back to life in Remembering PNG, in which he reflects on the moment captured in each image. Looking at his photographs after more than thirty years, Clarke says, "I felt again the warm, damp air, remembered struggling up the steep muddy tracks, heard the yodeling cries with which people communicated over long distances. Even the deliciously unique taste of pandanus sauce mixed with crisp young fern leaves came back to me." In the book, Clarke uses memory and imaginations, his observations from the field, and even poetry to create a narrative that is as rich and engaging as his superb images.
Read Less
Add this copy of Remembering Papua New Guinea. an Eccentric Ethnography to cart. $37.68, very good condition, Sold by Lawrence Jones rated 4.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Nobby Beach, QLD, AUSTRALIA, published 2003 by Pandanus Books.
Choose your shipping method in Checkout. Costs may vary based on destination.
Seller's Description:
Very Good. 4to. 178pp, bibliography, bw & col ills. Pictorial card. Minor edge wear and small corner creases. The author pays homage to the Maring and Bomagai-Angoiang people of PNGs Simbai and Jimi Valleys. He spent a year with them from 1954, just six years after their first contact with Europeans and so records a way of life that no longer exists.