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REVIEWS / COMMENTS on Seremetakis’s books
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"The Last Word is bold, powerful, and moving. It should
be our first word in our rehearing of the Mediterranean."
Catharine R. Stimpson
(Dean & Professor, Comparative Literature,
New York University)

"A remarkable book. Anyone who thinks they already
know how to address the relationship between death and the social order
–or relations between men and women for that matter –should read this
book. It is a powerful invitation to think again."
Marilyn Strathern
(Professor of Anthropology/Gender Studies, University
of Manchester, UK)

"A highly original, sensitive, feisty and exciting anthropological
work that will invigorate social theory, ethnographic writing, feminist
theory, and of course the anthropology of ‘modernizing’ Europe….A
genuine even heroic contribution to the study of mankind." Michael
Taussig
(Professor of Anthropology, Columbia University)

"A fascinating book and model of engaged scholarship…
I have been searching in vain for a book that would effect a transitin
between the present and the past. The Last Word provides the
perfect bridge, an anthropological perspective on otherness as well as a
sense of continuity and discontinuity between modern and ancient
Greece."
Page duBois
(Professor of Classics, University of
California )

"Seremetakis’s book which I enjoyed teaching…,is
a passionately conceived ethnography of death as social experience.…Imagery,
writing style, argument—all are explosive. There will be no
dispassionate responses, but few will forget the effect."
Arthur Kleinman
(Professor, Dept. of Social Medicine, Harvard
University)

"In the double sense of its title, this ethnography
is indeed the last (or latest) word in contemporary efforts in
anthropology to mesh the linguistic and the sensorial, the analytic and
the aesthetic, the structural and the experiential. The result is a
powerful work that should attract attention outside its specific
ethnographic genre and location."
George Marcus
(Professor, Anthropology/Cultural Studies, Rice
University)

"The Last Word combines …an assiduously
scientific anthropology with convolutions of the imagination reminiscent
of Baudelaire."
Paul Friedrich
(Professor , Linguistics, University of
Chicago)

"…An undeniable continuity links the Neolithic
goddesses of birth and death excavated in the Balkans by Gimbutas with the
oracular exhumation ceremonies performed south of there by present-day
Maniat women. A similar continuity links Maniat women’s polyphonic
laments with the corporeal polyphony celebrated in Kristeva’s
Greek-borne poetics…"
in American Ethnologist
Margaret Trawick (Massay
University, New Zealand)

"The Last Word is a most thorough, emotionally
and intellectually inspired and inspiring consideration and interpretation
of a people’s life, its mind and soul in their unique cultural
individuality. …A highly-gifted offspring of her native soil…, [Seremetakis]
instigated by her love for that soil, went back to devote for several
years her rich, wide, multifaceted scientific knowledge and epertise, as
well as her extraordinary perception, to the …study…of her native
culture in its long history, its mind, beliefs, life and practices… Most
expert, skillful and touching is the manner in which the author’s word,
in informing, conquers and transports her reader."
Andonis Decavalles
(Distinguished Professor, Comparative Literature,
Fairleigh Dickinson University)

"A significant contribution to our understanding of performance as
social practice, The Last Word forces a reassessment of
conventional views of gender, ritual and the interweaving of aesthetic form
and personal experience. And it does so through a prose that engages and
challenges a wide range of readers…"
Don Brenneis
(President AAA—American Anthropological
Association, 2003)

"…Like Athena, who sprang from the head of Zeus
fully grown and ready for battle, Seremetakis has made a dramatic entry
into the fields of anthropology and Greek studies with her new book The
Last Word, a tour-de-force of ethnography and theory… The
depth of Seremetakis’s involvement…gives new meaning to the term
participant observation… Her analyses illuminate the dynamics of sexual
politics in ways not previously explored in Greece, or anywhere else to my
knowledge."
in Journal of Modern Hellenism
(Peter Allen, Rhode Island University)

"In this remarkable work Seremetakis comes the
closest that a reflexive and refined scholarship can to the resonance of
moira, of human fate and affliction, to the timbre of womanhood amid the
starkness of the Southern Peloponnese."
Roy Wagner
(Professor, Anthropology/Symbolic Studies, University
of Virginia)
  
"I am quite taken by the breath and depth of
Seremetakis’s…The Senses Still.
…This volume provides a detailed anthropology of the way that memory
has been shaped and shapes us through our technical means of cultural
memory….A solid, intellectually daring book!"
Sander Gilman, Professor, Germanic Studies, University of
Chicago

"The Senses Still explores areas of cultural
life too complex, too experimental to be contained within the bounds of a
traditional ethnography…. An understanding of culture must include an
examination of the role of the senses. Seremetakis…confronts us with
this necessity."
Jay Ruby, Professor Center for Visual Communication, Temple
University

"…In most studies the body is examined as text that
is "read" and "written." In Seremetakis’s works the
body is …also experienced by the senses…
Many are the benefits of social sciences by the adoption of her poetically
sensual approach…"
Paul Stoller, Professor of Anthropology, Westchester University

"…An important addition to the recent
anthropological literature which is seeking to resist the anesthesia of
objectivist method and exclusively formalistic analyses..."
James W. Fernandez, Professor of Anthropology, University of
Chicago

"A thick satisfying soup of a book, with new flavors
and new routes to rewriting a history of the senses. ..A book to prod the
anesthetized body of theory on modernity via a tour from early Hollywood
camerawork on war to contemporary videowork on Rodney King, from newly
opened body of Swedish interwar gymnasiums to the lost tastes of Grecian
peaches..."
Catherine Lutz, Professor of Anthropology, University of North
Carolina
  
Reviews/Comments in Greece:
(in translation)
On March 12, 1998, 12.30pm , in the Arcade of Books , the
national space for the display and presentation of significant
publications, in the Amphitheatre of Discourse and Art, the Livanis
Publishing Co., one of the largest publishers in Greece, launched a press
conference-presentation of Seremetakis’s books, The Last Word, The
Senses Still and Crossing the Body, in the presence of over 400
people, among which, as reported in the media, many well known
politicians, academics, writers and artists.
Excerpts from presentations:
MARIA DAMANAKI, Senator & author
"...I can speak about two of the most significant books of Nadia
Seremetakis, THE LAST WORD and CROSSING THE BODY, from my
own angle, that of a woman who very early in her life got actively
involved in the androcentric social and political life of Greece and in
this long process I had the opportunity to experience, observe , evaluate
and reevaluate facts and events of gender behavior. Today, looking back I
conclude with sadness that we lacked a scientific guide, a scientific base
of "Women's Studies" that women activists, women politicians
would be able to go to and draw documentation and , why not, self
knowledge.…
Checking ,out of personal interest, the international bibliography...and
seeing the significance that gender had acquired in the various
disciplines, I became aware of our gap and terrible lack in Greece...
Given all this, I must stress the importance of the Greek publication of
Seremetakis's books. Nowhere in the international bibliography do we
encounter anything parallel to her work. In my opinion her books do not
simply add but they create a base of scientific quality and validity
valuable to Greek researchers on gender issues....

GEORGE ANDREOPOULOS,
ex Secretary General of Ministry of Justice/Lawyer / Political Analyst
" ...Looking at Seremetakis' s work in general, we can say she
always experiments and pioneers methodological and thematic exchanges
between disciplines. There one discovers her extraordinary ability to
investigate difference but also connections between apparently unrelated
phenomena, issues and spaces and to masterfully montage scattered
fragments.
For her original, invigorating theory on montage we must read and reread
THE SENSES STILL...
Her writings which began appearing abroad since 1991, pose questions and
answers that concern the most crucial problems in Greece today. And her
answers which are not easy, are given to the reader poetically, opening
horizons we did not know before...."

KATERINA ANGELAKI-ROOK, poet & translator
"... In THE LAST WORD, a really remarkable piece of work by
Seremetakis,....one understands that pain is the lament itself--the lament
is not the description of pain-- it is the necessary tool ...of pain. Pain
unites speech with ritual movement, the sob… The mourning singer in her
improvised lament presents the dead...just like the corypheus in the
ancient tragedy--a parallelism successfully drawn and analyzed by
Seremetakis. Precisely because she understood so deeply that
pain-substance, that poetry-pain; and saw it not only with the eyes of her
discipline but also through her own personal poetics…"

JOHN CHIOLES, Professor of Comparative Literature,
New York University & University of Athens
"... When referring to the work of Nadia Seremetakis we actually
speak of the poetry of human science. And in this book presentation-event
today we are presenting the poet-anthropologist Seremetakis...
Specifically her ethnography THE LAST WORD is a highly original and
exciting work that radically invigorates existing theories of the last two
decades in anthropology, literature, sociology , performance studies, and
changes the ethnographic writing bringing it closer to poetic discourse in
the context of European Studies and beyond...
Characteristic of her book is that rare position of the writer-researcher
both inside and outside the culture under study... This gives a...richness
in her writing which carries not only the strength of persuasion but the
dynamics of imagination and daring.... Thus she opens horizons that her
discipline itself has not yet thought of existing...."

ARIS MARAGOPOULOS, Critic, Author & Translator
" ...The three books, The Last Word, The Senses Still and Crossing
the Body, of the anthropologist Seremetakis map an inexhaustible
anthropological topos: the senses.
…If the investigation of the unknown topos of the senses explains to
some
degree the enchantment that Seremetakis's work exerts, the subversive way
by which she achieves this enchantment, completes the picture -- a picture
that is heretical and unorthodox in the context of conventional
anthropology. Seremetakis places the researcher to the position of the
anthropological subject and visa versa . She in turn plays with the
symbolic, emotional and performative use of everyday language. She reads
sensory forms where classical anthropologists read mummified stereotypes,
(in terms of her research subjects)she recognizes "donors" where
others see mere "informants", she moves through experiential
fragments of the private which retrieve the collective memory that was
fragmented by modernization, she mixes narrative tropes invisible to
common scientific discourse; in short she merges the ethnographic with the
biographical in the persona she herself terms "hybrid figure, the
native anthropologist." Following this dangerous route-- dangerous
because she does not adopt the neo-colonial gaze of the dominant
discipline--, the author is forced to constantly translate or, more
accurately , transmute her voice...
Seremetakis proves to the reader that she knows the origin of language in
the senses as much as she knows the anthropological code… Those who will
look into her texts will learn it through a most enjoyable reading…"

John Sakellarakis, distinguished archaeologist &
author
"…The Last Word of Seremetakis is the most significant
contemporary anthropological work I read…As a field researcher and
excavator in and of archeology, I can testify the significant
contributions of Seremetakis in my field as well…"

Reviews in the Greek Press & Journals
"…Books like The Last Word, The Senses Still, and
Crossing the Body offer the fundamental infrastructure for all of
us to clarify once and for all much discussed concepts of culture such as
Tradition and Modernity. Besides, we live in times that exchange on all
levels is identified with cheap modernization. In literature this has
taken the form of epidemic. I recommend therefore Seremetakis’s
anthropological stories as the most interesting, elegant and in the final
analysis most "useful" tests among those circulating
today."
Book review: "Translating the Body"
national Sunday newspaper TO VEMA, April 19, 1998

"The Senses Still , a very interesting, path breaking for
the Greek context, book…
The texts of the volume lead us to the understanding of culture through
the senses that shape it…"
journal ARCHEOLOGIA, #66, March 1998

"The Last Word inaugurates the perspective of
"native anthropology" in European ethnography and especially in
the anthropology of Greece. It opens the door to diachronic analysis of
Greek culture and the investigation of self-knowledge that such analysis
presupposes…"
national daily newspaper KATHIMERINI, October 9, 1991

"...Unlike all other anthropological works ...Seremetakis's work
is not a unidimensional anthropological study but combines scientific
interest with poetic sensibility and realistic documentation with
philosophical interpretation... Undoubtedly this intermarrying of science
with poetics in her books created a work that represents a theoretical and
methodolical break in the context of Humanities and Social Studies…"
EPTACYCLOS Archeological-Philological journal,
#10(90), May 1998

"...THE LAST WORD reveals the social
foundation and the scientific base of the legal theory that ‘custom,
wherever dominant, has the power of written law."... THE LAST WORD
is an original, indigenously revealing anthropological research..."
POLITIKA THEMATA Journal of political analysis,
#1023, September 1995

"...there is one thing that makes her work
unsurpassable: the development of her theory of performance as poesis. In THE
LAST WORD the concept of poesis is restored to include all three
realities: the ritualistically material, the social-functional and the
imaginary. This synthetic conceptual foundation points to the
interpretation of poesis that Diotima realized in Plato's Symposium. After
Diotima...Seremetakis is second in the history of ideas and the first
after the domination of religious...misinterpretations of the Middle Ages…
to restore poesis as material praxis, as social intervention and as
imaginary conception of human social past, present and future.… THE
LAST WORD is… a foundational work in Greek anthropology.
THESES Journal of socio-political and economic analysis,
#55, 1996

Comments-Presentations have also appeared in many local
Presses and Magazines, as well as national and local TV programs and radio
programs in Greece.
Seremetakis’s work has also been the subject of a 30
min. Greek Public TV documentary, which was
aired first in 2001 and repeated several times during 2002.
    
*The above
reviews/comments come from the records of The University of Chicago Press
and of Livanis Publishing Organization(Athens) .
    
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