In the eye of the wild

Nastassja Martin

Book - 2021

"What happened on that day, the 25th of August, 2015 was not: Bear attacks a French anthropologist in the remote Kamchatka Mountains. What happened was: Bear and woman meet violently and the boundary between realms, between the human and the animal, is erased. What happened was a meeting of mythical time and real time, of the past and the instant of encounter, of flesh and of dream. To Believe in the Animal tells the story of the anthropologist Nastassja Martins's nearly fatal run-in with a bear while conducting research in Russia and of the aftermath of the event, of the wounds she took away from it but also of a rebirth in spirit and mind. As an anthropologist, Martin has made a name for the fullness of her engagement with the p...eoples she studies, the Gwich'in of Alaska and the Evens of far eastern Siberia. She seeks to bridge the distance between the subject, so-called, and herself, between the different experiences and kinds of knowledge that each of them brings into play, the better to frame, and open up, questions about the nature of human beings. In her dangerous encounter with the bear, however, Martin encounters another kind of being altogether, setting off a series of subsequent disasters. She is left severely mutilated and undergoes multiple operations in a provincial Russian hospital, whose ghastly chief surgeon sports a mouthful of gold teeth and presides over a harem of young nurses. Back in France, she goes under the knife again, supposedly to fix the work done in Russia, but the results are even more problematic. She comes to the conclusion that she must return to Kamchatka. She must discover what it means to have become, as the Evens call it, a miedka, a person who is not only human but beast. That is the only way that she can follow through on the anthropological work she had begun"--

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Subjects
Genres
Anecdotes
Published
New York : New York Review Books [2021]
Language
English
French
Main Author
Nastassja Martin (author)
Other Authors
Sophie Lewis (translator)
Physical Description
112 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781681375854
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

French anthropologist Martin makes her U.S. debut with this stunning reflection on her self-discovery in the wake of a bear attack she suffered in Siberia. During a 2015 research trip that took her from northern Alaska to the Kamchatka peninsula in Russia, Martin was mauled by bear, an attack that shattered parts of her skull and left her to explore her body as a place of anthropological inquiry. Her recovery began in an operating room in Russia, but much of the reconstructive surgery was redone when she returned home in France, her jaw "the scene of a Franco-Russian medical cold war" (the doctor, Martin writes, said that "it would be risky to leave an ex-Soviet plate in my jaw"). Post-op, she began to contend with the "inexpressible violence" within herself that she'd also recognized in the bear, not that when "our bodies were commingled, there was that incomprehensible us." After realizing that the only way to heal was to go back to Kamchatka, she returned to the place where her body and anthropological practice were transformed. With exquisite prose and sharp observations, Martin reveals how curiosity can uncover the most vivid aspects of the human condition. This is a profound look at the violence and beauty of life. (Nov.)

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