
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
When the Dutch government moved to stop headhunting by the Marind people of New Guinea in 1902 their actions unleashed new epidemics among a population already suffering from low fertility. Donovanosis ( Tik Merauke in Marind), a rare, newly recognised sexually transmitted infection for which no medicine was available, affected huge numbers. This compelling book investigates the causes of this unique epidemic by exploring the fascinating lives and rituals of the Marind along with those of the missionaries, anthropologists, doctors, administrators, film makers and bird hunters swept up in the events. Tik Merauke shows how the discovery of an effective medicine brought relief, but how the coercive resettlement of the Marind into model villages has left a troubled legacy still felt by the surviving people.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Notes on the illustrations
- Preface
- Timeline
- 1 New Guinea: The bird
- 2 Barenda: Life as a Marind man
- 3 The lives of Marind women: Roles and rituals
- 4 Headhunting: Turning the enemy into a friend
- 5 Captain John Strachan and Sir William MacGregor
- 6 The arrival of the Sacred Heart missionaries
- 7 Paul Wirz: Maverick Swiss anthropologist
- 8 Petrus Vertenten: ‘Saviour of the Kaya-kayas’
- 9 Interlude: How news of impending Marind extinction reached US cinemas
- 10 A stealth pathogen, serpiginous ulcers and the Spanish flu
- 11 The epidemics strike
- 12 Max Thierfelder and the treatment campaign
- 13 After the epidemic: Jan van Baal and Jan Verschueren debate the way forward
- 14 Yul Bole Gebze: A Malind voice
- 15 The threat of extinction returns
- Notes
- Appendix
- Acknowledgements
- Index