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The Forest of Taboos: Morality, Hunting, and Identity among the Huaulu of the Moluccas [Paperback]

Valerio Valeri (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

March 29, 2000
"The Forest of Taboos may be considered among the most important books ever written by an anthropologist. Valeri writes suberbly, and this book makes a fundamental contribution to one of the most central lines of thought in twentieth-century anthropology. He shows that taboo is finally comprehensible."- John Stephen Lansing, University of Michigan "The Forest of Taboos is no conventional ethnography, more an extended meditative essay on its subject, erudite, rich in ideas and data, wide-ranging in its theoretical inspiration, and self-consciously literary in form. It is a fitting memorial to an author whose life was so tragically cut short."-Roy Ellen, University of Kent at Canterbury

This eloquent and profound book, completed by Valerio Valeri shortly before his death in 1998, contends that the ambivalence felt by all humans about sex, death, and eating other animals can be explained by a set of coordinated principles that are expressed in taboos. In elegant prose, Valeri evokes the world of the Huaulu, forest hunters of Indonesia. The hidden attractions of the animal world, which invades the human world in perilous ways, he shows, also delineate that which the Huaulu regard as most human about themselves.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

“A magisterial work, brilliant, profound, moving.”—Sebastian de Grazia, author of Machiavelli in Hell and A Country With No Name

--This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

About the Author

Valerio Valeri (1944-1998) was professor of anthropology at the University of Chicago and the author of Kingship and Sacrifice: Ritual and Society in Ancient Hawaii.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 592 pages
  • Publisher: University of Wisconsin Press; 1 edition (March 29, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0299162141
  • ISBN-13: 978-0299162146
  • Product Dimensions: 8.8 x 6 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,641,183 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Definitive Account of Taboo, March 5, 2002
Taboo is a subject that has been around in anthropology for a long long time. How can we make sense of the rules we find in almost all cultures about who one can marry and who one cannot, what one can eat and what one cannot, who one can have sex with and who one cannot? And how can we explain the fact that all of these disparate prohibitions seem intuitively to fall under a single idea - that of 'taboo'?

Forest of Taboos presents an answer to this question. By synthesizing the diverse literature on taboo (symbolic, Freudian, etc.) he creates a view of taboo which emphasizes the embodied nature of human being. "a subject symbolically constituted," he writes, "but necessarily located in the body, must be haunted by the fear of its disintegration through the body, since it constantly experiences the body's resistance to the subject's symbolic ordering of itself. The embodied subject's fear of disintegration through the body and by the body is the ultimate basis for the notion of pollution". Along the way he explains Jewish food prohibitions, love (a "controlled form of fear" according to Valeri), and pets (he doesn't like them). All of this is delivered in a powerful, eloquent, and very dense prose where personal reverie mixes with humanistic philosophy and the dense technical materials of anthropology. Although compelling and beautiful, it is not for the faint of heart.

Valeri's argument is convincing, and is backed up on several fronts. A massive literature review deals with the history of past thought on taboo. A detailed analysis of taboo amongst te Hualu, the group with which Valeri did his fieldwork, adds ethnographic bite to his theoretical argument. Finally, a meditation on the relationship of 'theory' to ethnography ties together these elements to create a book in which the habits of a particular group of people shed light on the general conditions in which all human beings live there lives. I highly recommend it.

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1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Rather Scholarly, November 25, 2003
This review is from: The Forest of Taboos: Morality, Hunting, and Identity among the Huaulu of the Moluccas (Paperback)
While this book is no doubt well-written on the specific topic it is devoted to, for the non-specialist most of it will be of limited interest.
However, it DOES contain interesting ethnographic notes on Seram in general and the Huaulu in particular.
With relatively little published on the ethnography of this island recently, I would still say this book is a worthy purchase for those interested in the great "Nusa Ina" (Mother Island) of Central Maluku.
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