Royal Anthropological Institute

  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size


THE TUAREG

E-mail Print PDF

54 minutes Colour
Director: Charlie Nairn
Anthropologist: Jeremy Keenan

This film is about a group of nomadic Tuareg living high up in the Hoggar Mountains near Tamanrasset in Algeria. The main focus of the film is the collapse of the former economic basis of their camps. In 1962 the Algerian government banned the system of slavery and contract labour which had helped to keep the Tuareg camps supplied with grain. Now, instead of undertaking 500 mile long trading journeys to Niger, Tuareg buy grain in Tamanrasset with money obtained form selling cheap leather goods to the burgeoning tourist trade. The commentary, by Jeremy Keenan, also introduces aspects of the Tuareg kinship system, and material about the social life of the group.

The second part of the film concentrates on the devastating effects of the recent drought on this way of life. The pasture is now so poor that camps have to move more frequently, and so traditional patterns of life are being abandoned in favour of a sedentary existence as cultivators alongside the Tuareg's former slaves.

J. Keenan, 1978. The Tuareg: People of Ahaggar. Allen Lane, London.

R. F. Murphy, 1974. Review of the film. American Anthropologist, Vol. 76, pp. 212­213.

 

Next Event


Reviewer Meets Reviewed - Educational Failure and Working Class White Children in Britain
on 17 May 2012 at 09.30am
at Centre for Anthropology, British Museum
Centre for Anthropology, British Museum image
takes place in
0 day

Royal Anthropological Institute, 50 Fitzroy Street, London W1T 5BT, United Kingdom, Email: Office Manager