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The City of Women

audiobook The City of Women by Ruth Landes in History

Description

The Chief Rabbi commemorates the terrible events since the millennium with a message of hope. He argues that peace will only be achieved when we learn to resepect and rejoice in each other's differences; whatever our ancestry or convictions.


#454766 in Books 2006-07-30Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 8.99 x .85 x 6.05l; 1.11 #File Name: 0826315569287 pages


Review
8 of 10 people found the following review helpful. Brillian Book on Female Candomble Religion; from a maleBy El BrujoIf you are looking for an excellent book on the Candomble Orixa Worship of Brazil; then this is the classic. The book as the title states is of the power of the Brazilian Priestesses of the orixas; also known as orisha. Mai De Santos; or Priestesses of Orixas are as powerful; and as highly respected as the Babalawos of the Ifa and Babalorichas of Lucumi. I highly recomend this to all Voodoo Mambos; Santeria Santeras; and all Woman of the world; who believe in the power of Woman.From a man's point of view this is a brilliant and inspiring work; and should be read buy all who honor the Ancient African Gods.2 of 4 people found the following review helpful. The City of Women is a Vapid travelogueBy Temujin EkunfeoAccording to the blurb on the back cover of The City of Women. . . "Marketed as an exotic travelogue and dismissed by anthropologists when it appeared in 1947; it is the truest comment that could be made about this book.When I opened The City of Women I looked for the Index and the table of contents because I was interested some particular information that was supposed to be in it. What I found was that there was no index and the table of contents had very little content.I first started reading The City of Women I was struck by the lack of purpose and even more so by the lack of structure; this book should have been called my wasted year of doing no real research in Brazil.It seemed clear to me that in her time in Brazil she learned very little about the Black Brazilians that spent time around; what is worse she was the only English speaking anthropologist/ethnologist to meet Eliseo Martiniano do Bonfim the last Brazilian boy to be sent to Lagos Nigeria to be initiated into the priesthood and trained in preparation his return to Brazil. Dr. Landes calls him "an institution in Bahia and in all of Brazil. Yet Dr. Landes only dedicates around 20 pages to him; 20 pages in a 248 page book.As both an anthropologist and a priest in the Yoruba tradition in the Cuban Diaspora I am appalled by her complete lack of academic rigor and generally cavalier attitude in general.She has an opportunity to learn from a man who was now nearly 80 year old when she met him in 1938 who left Brazil around 14 years of age and came back 11 years later speaking 2 African languages and English as well as being armed with wealth knowledge on Yoruba tradition both in Africa and in Brazil.Dr. Landes drones on page after page about the Germans; the English; the Americans she encounters and their vacuous boring lives.Dr. Landes drones on page after page about the Mothers of the Saint who were as Eliseo Martiniano do Bonfim described them; not very well versed in their tradition or at least that is the way Dr. Landes makes them seem and what is worse Dr. Landes writes about the "Temples" being places where men could come to find a mistress to patronize with money and other favors and have sexual relations with the junior women in the priesthood in the temple. If any of this is the least bit true her portrayal of the temples of Bahia and the women who are priests in them are not centers of worship but brothels with a religious face. If these portrayals are not true then Dr. Landes spent a lot of time in Bahia Brazil gathering material with which to libel the African religious communities that she encountered there.In closing I must strongly say that The City of Women is neither a good source of information on African religion or women's issues in Bahia Brazil between 1938 and 1939.0 of 1 people found the following review helpful. A Ground-Breaking Study: Ruth Landes Belongs to the AgesBy Robin BeckwithSimply the best; most profound and honest anthropological study I've ever read. Recommend reading slowly and with a great deal of thought.

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