Green Bamboo
The American anthropologists Kirk and Karen Endicott share how living with Malaysian’s indigenous people, the Batek, taught them to be better parents and how Malaysia’s government took away the Batek’s ancestral rainforest-homeland. Since the 1970s, Kirk & Karen Endicott have worked to understand the Orang Asli, the original people of the Thai-Malaysian peninsula. The American anthropologists first visited one Orang Asli tribe, a group of Batek people, in the 1970s after traveling upriver deep into the rainforest. Since then, the Batek’s homeland has been taken away from them and the trees chopped down, replaced mainly by palm oil plantations. By living as part of the Batek community, the Endicotts learned to be better parents and that the Batek’s lifestyle has many advantages over “modern” life in big cities. Dr. Kirk Endicott is Professor Emeritus of Anthropology in the Department of Anthropology at Dartmouth University. They jointly authored a book called “The headman was a woman: the gender egalitarian Batek of Malaysia” with stories about the people they met and details about their field research.
4 episodios
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