4/13/2011

The Last Filipino Head Hunters Review

The Last Filipino Head Hunters
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
The main attraction of this book is the brilliant photography.This was given to me as a birthday present while I was actually in the area covered by the book.I was disappointed that he did not visit the eastern Cordillera Igorots with which I am familiar.
Mr. Howard's experiences are amusing and too true to life, but I found some of his conclusions erroneous and he seemed a bit too credulous towards everything he was told.He is obviously an outsider to this culture, and as such the locals tended to embellish a bit, and he bought it all.I am an honorary member of this culture by marriage. Concerning the ages of the interviewees, I highly doubt the statements he documents.This culture had no idea about keeping time until the government required it.I have spent a dozen years trying to forensically figure out the ages of my own father and mother-in-law; and there is considerable doubt about the actual age of my wife, who was born sometime between 1960 and 1965.The only historical benchmark most of these people have is the Japanese occupation during WWII.If the author had done a little more questioning, I'm sure he could have gotten some much better stories.I found some of his observations a bit condescending due to lack of familiarity, for example the reference to "cheap gin" as a medium of exchange.In actual fact the Ginebra San Miguel is a standard social fixture throughout northern Luzon, and normally no gathering of men is without a bottle, but foreign outsiders are rarely party to such gatherings.He draws an incomplete conclusion about the poverty of the Ifugao landholder who couldn't afford to provide a pig for the celebration.I'm sure if he had an honest opinion of some of the more reliable townsfolk, they would have let him know that the this landowner was a worthless drunk who couldn't even manage something as simple as a farm.My in-laws are subsistence farmers in the jungle a dozen miles beyond the road, and they are wealthy enough to have sent 10 kids through college, through raising and selling animals.
Nevertheless, this book gives a good insight into the motivations of these people.I more clearly understood the need for tribal war and peace pacts which have given me more than one wrinkled brow since I got married.The narrative is very accurate, just not the conclusions.My own family has a set of the gongs with the human jawbone handles.They claim they are Japanese; I don't know if that's the truth or if they are soft-selling their actual origin to the white cousin to avoid offending me.You won't go wrong with this book.

Click Here to see more reviews about: The Last Filipino Head Hunters

Product Description:
Illustrated with pictures from the beginning of the 20th century to the present, with commentary by a visitor who met the last survivors of a now-vanished culture, The Last Filipino Head Hunters brings to light a way of life that survived for millennia before being destroyed by colonial powers. Includes 500 color photos.

Buy Now

Want to read more honest consumer review about The Last Filipino Head Hunters now ?

0 comments:

Post a Comment