| A Review of: Living Tribes by Olga SteinOne of my favorites among this year's crop of photography books,
is "Living Tribes". With his extraordinary photos Colin
Prior brings us the face of contemporary tribal societies. I say
face' because this is what he so often brilliantly captures-a moment
of pride, a wondering expression, a shy smile, and all those other
universal qualities which render the photographed subject instantly
familiar. The face may be that of a young woman of the Himba, a
tribe inhabiting the remote region of northern Namibia, or that of
a Herero girl from southern Namibia. It may be a young man of the
Kenya-Tanzania Maasai peoples, marked with white paint and wearing
a traditional beaded headdresses which announces his upcoming
graduation to warrior status, or a young mother of northwest Kenya's
Turkana tribe, her neck encircled by countless beaded rings, her
ears decorated with large leaf-shaped pieces of brass or copper.
We are shown the men and women of Kenya's Saburu with their beaded
ornaments and metal chains worn across the face, and as we follow
Prior northward to Morocco, we meet the Berber in their adobe
villages situated on the edge of the Sahara. There is much more:
There are superb, revealing closeups of the Balti of the Karkoram
mountains in northern Pakistan, the Ladakhi of north India, the
Bhutanese, descendants of the Mongols, living in Bhutan since the
seventh century AD, the Lisu hilltribe of the Golden Triangle (an
area which includes northern Thailand, eastern Myanmar and northwestern
Laos), and the Padaung, a small sub-group of the Karen, "a
loose confederation of heterogenous but closely related tribes"
of Thailand and Myanmar.
Each of the 15 sets of photos of a tribe or ethnic community
"linked by common practices, clothing, language, religion and
customs" is accompanied by text describing the group's history,
daily life and rituals, and the problems stemming from globalized
travel and tourism, local government action designed to attract
foreign investment, and the growing temptation of earning a living
outside of the tribal milieu. In fact it is a mini thesis of Prior's,
stated in his well-managed introduction, that these societies are
in danger of losing their distinctiveness-hence the importance of
this visual record of ways of life which are bound in Prior's view
to become parts of the past.
My sense, from looking at this book, is that the danger of cultural
loss is somewhat overstated. Ancient societies have shown themselves
resilient, incorporating whatever technology and comforts the outside
world made available in order to improve the quality of tribal life,
but without giving up the essentials-their religious practices,
artistic traditions, etc. The Inuit of the American Arctic and
Inuvialuit of Canada may have traded in their dog teams and sleds
for snowmobiles, and caribou-skin clothing for hi-tech ski wear,
but even Prior concedes they keep their culture "through
singing, carving, drawing, writing and documentary film-making."
What I most enjoy about these photos is the very fact of looking
at people who are different and yet no so different.
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