| Pulchritude" is the
one word I highlighted with a big, curious question mark in my
freshman-year anthropology text, Patterns of Culture. Author Ruth
Benedict discusses the value of probing primitive societies, then
outlines the puberty rites of the Nandi tribe in East Africa. "In
the region where feminine beauty is all but identified with obesity,
the girl at puberty is ... fed with sweet and fatty foods, allowed
no activity, and her body rubbed assiduously with oils," she
writes. "It is not regarded as necessary for the man to achieve
pulchritude"--that is, a similar state of comeliness.
Anthropology has become much less focused on the exotic and much
more on the edgy. That's one lesson from the case of Yektan Turkyilmaz,
described in this issue. Turkyilmaz, a graduate student in cultural
anthropology and a Turk of Kurdish descent, spent more than two months
imprisoned in Armenia, charged with obscure offenses. Armenians remain
bitter about being victimized by Turkey in the twentieth century's
first genocide; Turkyilmaz is committed to studying that period.
In an essay in The Chronicle of Higher Education, Orin Starn, Turkyilmaz's
dissertation adviser, observes that his student's story points to
changes in the field of anthropology. "In the hoary old days
of the pith helmet, native porters, and steamer-trunk expeditions
to Samoa and Congo," he notes, "anthropologists noted the
minutiae of kinship structures and tribal ritual down to the last
cowrie shell." Those old-time anthropologists tended to shy
away from writing about "less comfortable realities." Now,
he continues, Duke students are doing dissertations about Mexico's
Zapatista rebels and anti-globalization activism, everyday life and
women's rights in Castro's Cuba, and Palestinian refugees in Syria
and Lebanon.
Turkyilmaz's experience signals that scholarly investigation can
matter. It also accents the risks of asking difficult questions in
difficult places.
--Robert J. Bliwise, Editor
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