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Shaping and Reshaping the Tasaday: A Question of Cultural Identity—A Review Article

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2011

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Extract

The twenty years during which the Tasaday of the southern Philippines have drawn the attention of anthropologists and social scientists can be divided into two major periods. The first is the “discovery” of the Tasaday in the early 1970s, followed by nearly fifteen years of relative neglect. The second is the eruption in the late 1980s of charges that the Tasaday were an instance of fraud, deception, and political corruption by the Marcos regime.

Initially, the Tasaday were portrayed as exotic in their isolation, their hunting and gathering lifestyle, their nakedness, their existence in caves, and their gentleness. Exotic “others” have been similarly characterized by descriptive (usually one-word) labels that emblemize what the people and the society are thought to be about. Thus, Kalinga are litigious, Samoans are sexually liberated, Tikopians are hierarchical, Javanese are patient, Balinese are theatrical, and Yanomamo are fierce.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Association for Asian Studies, Inc. 1991

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References

List of References

Dumont, Jean Paul. 1988. “The Tasaday, Which and Whose, Toward the Political Economy of an Ethnographic Sign.” Cultural Anthropology 3: 261–75.Google Scholar
Holmberg, Allan R. 1950. Nomads of the Long Bow: The Siriono of Eastern Bolivia. Washington: Institute of Social Anthropology, Smithsonian Institution.Google Scholar
Iten, Oswald. 1986. “Die Tasaday: Ein Philippinischer Steinzeitschwindel.” Neue Zurcher Zeitung. Zurich, April 12: 7789.Google Scholar
Lathrap, Donald W. 1968. “The ‘Hunting’ Economies of the Tropical Forest Zone of South America: An Attempt at Historical Perspective.” In Man the Hunter, ed. Lee, Richard B. and DeVore, Irven. Chicago: Aldine Publishing Company: 2329.Google Scholar
Yengoyan, Aram A. 1976/1977. “Paradise Lost?The American Scholar 46, No. 1:134–38.Google Scholar