Taking the explication of experience as its object as well as its method, Marjorie Shostak’s Nisa The Life and Words of a !Kung Woman weaves together three narrative strands, and in doing so challenges the ethnographer’s penchant for the general and the anonymous. The first strand, the autobiographical details of a 50-year-old woman’s life among the seminomadic ! Kung hunter-gatherers of Botswana, adds to the ethnographical literature on the ! Kung. The second presents Nisa’s story as a metaphor for a woman’s experience, a story that reflects many of the experiences and dilemmas addressed in recent feminist writing. The third tells the story of an intercultural encounter in which the distinction between ethnographer and subject becomes blurred.
Nisa explains Nisa’s personality in terms of !Kung ways and, for the general reader, corrects and qualifies a number of received attitudes about “simple” societies. Michel Leiris’ warning that “We are all too inclined to consider a people happy if considering them makes us happy” applies particularly to the !Kung, whose seemingly uncomplicated way of life, enlightened attitudes toward child rearing, and undeniable charm make them prime candidates for Western appreciation. But Nisa’s answer to Shostak’s question, “What is it to be a !Kung woman?” makes us feel the force of ugly facts we might otherwise skim over. Only 54 percent of !Kung children live to marry Nisa loses all four of her children and a cherished husband. Nisa’s memories of sibling rivalries, of her terrible rages when denied her mother, of nasty fights over food undermine the idyllic vision Westerners cherish of childhoods lived in such “simple” circumstances.
Woven into Nisa’s autobiography are allusions to Shostak’s personal engagement with issues of gender. Nisa’s response to “What is it to be a !Kung woman?” also seems to answer another question, “What is it to be a woman?” In fact, Nisa’s answers illuminate not just one woman’s experience, but women’s experience in general. It is a salutary shock to realize how much ethnographic literature omits the perspective of women about women.
Nisa’s story is interwoven with Shostak’s presentation of their encounter at times each seems to exist primarily in response to the other. Nisa’s autobiography is a distinct narrative in a particular voice, but it is manifestly the product of a collaboration. Indeed, by casting Nisa in the shape of a “life,” Shostak employs a potent Western literary convention. Real lives, in fact, do not easily arrange themselves as stories that have recognizable shapes Nisa, for example, often says “We lived in that place, eating things. Then we left and went somewhere else.” It is in the process of the dialogue between Nisa and Shostak that a shaped story emerges from this seemingly featureless background.
1. Shostak’s approach to ethnography differs from the approach of most ethnographers in which one of the following ways?(A) She observes the culture of one group in order to infer the cultural characteristics of other, similar groups.
(B) She studies the life experiences of individuals apart from the cultural practices of a group.
(C) She contrasts individuals’ personal histories with information about the individuals’ culture.
(D) She exemplifies her general hypotheses about a culture by accumulating illustrative empirical data.
(E) She emphasizes the importance of the personal and the individual.
2. Which one of the following best expresses the author’s opinion of the way most ethnographic literature deals with women’s views of women?(A) It is admirable that many ethnographic studies avoid the narrow focus of some recent feminist thought as it deals with women’s views of women.
(B) It is encouraging that most women ethnographers have begun to study and report the views of women in the groups they study.
(C) It is unfortunate that most ethnographic literature does not deal with women’s views of women at all.
(D) It is surprising that more ethnographic studies of women do not use the information available through individual interviews of women about women.
(E) It is disappointing that most ethnographic studies of women’s views about women fail to connect individual experiences with larger women’s issues.
3. It can be inferred that which one of the following best exemplifies the “received attitudes” (Highlighted)?(A) The !Kung are people of undeniable charm.
(B) Considering the !Kung makes Western observers happy.
(C) People who live seminomadic lives have few serious problems.
(D) A large percentage of !Kung children die before reaching adulthood.
(E) The experience of seminomadic women is much like that of other women.
4. Which one of the following would most clearly support the author’s contention that Nisa’s experience as a !Kung woman illuminates women’s experience in general?(A) A systematic survey of a representative sample of Western women indicates that these women sympathize with Nisa’s tragedies.
(B) The use of the explication of experience as both a subject and a method becomes an extremely fruitful technique for ethnographers studying issues facing both men and women in non- Western cultures.
(C) Critics of feminist writers applaud the use of Shostak’s dialogue technique in the study of women’s issues.
(D) Another ethnographer explores the experiences of individual women in a culture quite different from that of the !Kung and finds many issues that are common to both cultures.
(E) Ethnographers studying the !Kung interview
!Kung women other than Nisa and find that most of them report experiences similar to those of Nisa.
5. It can be inferred that the “potent Western literary convention” (Highlighted) is most probably which one of the following? (A) personal revelation
(B) dramatic emphasis
(C) expository comparison
(D) poetic metaphor
(E) novelistic storytelling
6. The approach of which one of the following is most similar to Shostak’s approach as her approach is described in the passage? (A) The producer of a documentary film interacts on film with the film’s subject to reveal insights about the subject’s life.
(B) A work presented as an athlete’s autobiography is actually ghostwritten by a famous biographer.
(C) An ethnographer describes the day-to-day life of an individual in order to exemplify the way of life of a group of desert dwellers.
(D) A writer illustrates her views of women’s experience by recounting stories from her own childhood.
(E) The developer of a series of textbooks uses anecdotes based on the experiences of people of many cultures to highlight important points in the text.
7. It can be inferred that the author of the passage believes that the quotation in lines in Red best exemplifies which one of the following?(A) the cultural values of seminomadic peoples such as the !Kung
(B) the amorphous nature of the accounts people give of their lives
(C) the less-than-idyllic nature of the lives of nomadic people
(D) an autobiographical account that has a recognizable story
(E) a distinction between ethnographer and subject