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Carol Beckwith and
Angela Fisher |
AFRICAN
CEREMONIES
Carol Beckwith and Angela Fisher's lifelong commitment to photographing
the vanishing rituals and customs of tribal African cultures culminates
in their monumental masterwork, AFRICAN CEREMONIES. Ten years in the making,
this definitive work contains nearly 850 full-color photographs covering
dozens of ceremonies that span the human life cycle: from birth and initiations,
through courtship and marriage, royal coronations, seasonal rituals and
healing exorcisms, to death. Following publication of the book, the authors
received the United Nations Award of Excellence for their "vision and
understanding of the role of cultural traditions in the pursuit of peace
in the world," the London Royal Geographical Society's Kearton Medal
for recording ethnography and ritual, and the French Biarritz Photography
Festival's best book of the year.
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CAROL
BECKWITH
Carol
Beckwith was born in the United States and educated at the Boston Museum
of Fine Arts. She has been cited by United Press International as "foremost
among photographers who have recorded the cultures of the Far East, Pacific,
and Africa." She is the author of three previous books on African cultures,
all published by Abrams. Her first, Maasai, won the prestigious Annisfield-Wolf
Award in Race Relations; her second, Nomads of Niger, was based on
her three-year experience living with the Wodaabe nomads and is the subject
of her National Geographic film Way of the Wodaabe, and her
third, African Ark, with Angela Fisher, is a study of the people
and cultures of the Horn of Africa.
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ANGELA
FISHER
Angela Fisher was born in Australia and educated at Adelaide University.
She is the author of the internationally acclaimed Africa Adorned (Abrams), a 14-year study of traditional jewelry and body decoration covering
the entire continent of Africa. It was a Book-of-the-Month Club selection
and the subject of a National Geographic 34-page cover story. Her
second book, African Ark, with Carol Beckwith, received the Institute
of Human Origins prize, The Golden Hand of Lucy, and the Annisfield- Wolf
Award in Race Relations. A jewelry designer as well, Fisher has exhibited
her jewelry and photographs throughout Europe, America, Australia, and
Africa. |
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