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Masai manhood / directed by Chris Curling.

Academic Video Online: Premium - United States Available online

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Format:
Video
Contributor:
Curling, Chris., Director.
Llewelyn-Davies, Melissa., Researcher.
Series:
Academic Video Online
Disappearing world
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Maasai (African people).
Maasai (African people)--Education.
Maasai (African people)--Social life and customs.
Men, Masai--Social conditions.
Men, Masai.
Genre:
Documentary films.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (54 min.).
Place of Publication:
London : Royal Anthropological Institute, 1975.
Language Note:
In English.
Original language in English.
Summary:
This film was made after Masai Women and in the same area. Together the two films provide a vivid view of Masai men and women and their place in Masai society. The Masai are pastoral nomads in the East African rift valley with a social system which differentiates sharply between men and women and between age-sets. A particularly crucial distinction is made between men who are moran ('warriors') and more senior men classed as elders. After circumcision men live in the forest on the fringes of Masai society as moran debarred from marriage and excluded from crucial decision-making procedures. The film is focused on the life of the moran and on the dramatic eunoto ceremony which marks the important transition from warriorhood to full social maturity and the responsibilities of elderhood. The moran are given an opportunity in the film to talk about warriorhood and they sensitively strive to explain their ideals to the anthropologist. Their words are effectively translated in sub-titles. There is much valuable information in the film on the events leading up to the eunoto ceremony including a fascinating sequence on the joking abuse directed by the moran at their mothers and on the ritual procedures involved in the rite de passage itself. This may well be the last eunoto ceremony ever to be held as the pressures on the Masai to change their way of life are increasingly strong, and the film is important for the way in which it conveys the drama of the events and their significance both for the participants and for the Masai social system.
Notes:
Title from resource description page (viewed Feb. 6, 2014).
Recorded Kenya 0000.
OCLC:
877879950

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