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The Wind in the Bamboo

A Journey in Search of Asia's "Negrito" Indigenous People

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  • 308 pages
  • 11 hours of reading

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Historically defined as "Negrito" because they physically resemble small Africans, these forest peoples may have the most ancient ancestry in Asia. Captured for slavery, exhibited at the 1904 St. Louis World's Fair, nearly exterminated by disease and a cataclysmic volcano, they survive in a few places: Malaysia, the Philippines and India's remote Andaman Islands. Some are armed with spears and blowpipes, a few with cellphones and graduate degrees. Edith Mirante, author of Burmese Looking Glass and Down the Rat Hole, weaves a compelling Chatwinesque narrative examining race and identity and the environmental, social, political challenges these indigenous peoples face in contemporary Asia.

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The Wind in the Bamboo, Edith T. Mirante

Language
Released
2014
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(Paperback),
Book condition
Very Good
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€2.79

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Title
The Wind in the Bamboo
Subtitle
A Journey in Search of Asia's "Negrito" Indigenous People
Language
English
Released
2014
Format
Paperback
Pages
308
ISBN10
974524189X
ISBN13
9789745241893
Series
Description
Historically defined as "Negrito" because they physically resemble small Africans, these forest peoples may have the most ancient ancestry in Asia. Captured for slavery, exhibited at the 1904 St. Louis World's Fair, nearly exterminated by disease and a cataclysmic volcano, they survive in a few places: Malaysia, the Philippines and India's remote Andaman Islands. Some are armed with spears and blowpipes, a few with cellphones and graduate degrees. Edith Mirante, author of Burmese Looking Glass and Down the Rat Hole, weaves a compelling Chatwinesque narrative examining race and identity and the environmental, social, political challenges these indigenous peoples face in contemporary Asia.