🏆 Win $50 — Monthly contest 🏆 Monthly contest — 5 winners get $50 ·

by Richard M. Swiderski
Eldoret: An African Poetics of Technology is both a history and an anthropology of technology. As author Swiderski explains in the introduction, " 'Poetics,' derived from the Greek verb poein meaning 'to make do,' has as much to do with technology (material making) as with poetry (verbal making), and refers to the ongoing act of assembly that can look like the passage of time or the eternity of culture and is actually both. It is an African poetics because the act of assembly is motivated by African conditions, and executed through the genius and strength of the African people." The resulting ethnography, illustrated with thirty-two of the author's delightful line drawings, is unconventional in design and brilliantly executed. It will be of considerable interest and value not only to cultural anthropologists but to many in geography, economics, business, technology studies and allied fields. . Drawing on his personal experience in living in Eldoret, Swiderski creates an impressionistic
No reviews yet. Be the first!
Anne-Marie Green
Philip J. Neujahr