indri: (Default)
indri ([personal profile] indri) wrote2005-02-20 10:30 am

Lemur post for speakertocustomers

Last month, two new species of lemur were discovered.

I am currently reading Alison Jolly's Lords and Lemurs. Jolly has studied lemurs for more than forty years. and her seminal work, Lemur behavior: a Madagascar field study (1966) was one of the first books I read on the topic. She was the first primatologist to accurately observe the violent matriarchal society of the ring-tailed lemur, lemur catta.

Much of her fieldwork was done near the southern tip of Madagascar, at a small but remarkable reserve called Berenty, where ring-tailed and brown lemurs wander the forest without fear of humans. Lords and Lemurs describes Berenty, its geography, history and inhabitants (both human and protosimian). This is not a look focused solely on lemurs; her explicit aim is to describe the place as a whole, including sketches of its local peoples, including French colonials, the Tandroy "people of the thorns", and the "Science Tribe" of visiting naturalists.

I'm only part of the way through, but so far this is proving to be an enjoyable read, although I wonder whether the loose structure of the book will confuse me later on. Certainly, her love of the locale is clearly conveyed. But those of a weak stomach should know that it contains scenes of both gross human stupidity and infanticidal lemur savagery.
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[identity profile] lakrids404.livejournal.com 2005-02-20 01:05 am (UTC)(link)
Thanks for the link.
I have always wondered why there are not more discussions about lemur on people’s lj, it just seems to be a natural thing to talk about.

[identity profile] avidrosette.livejournal.com 2005-02-20 01:56 am (UTC)(link)
So what do think: post-Chosen, Spike is somehow reconstituted from the amulet amongst the Tandroy of Madagascar, his memories severely fragmented, until, one day, a visiting team of Science Tribesmen arrives on the island. Dispatched to locate an ancient amulet-of-thorns--believed to call forth a dimension-bending, infanticidal, ring-tailed lemur demon--this team includes among its members of scientists and scholars of the occult, one Wesley Wyndam-Price (or, you know, Fred, it you prefer het).

Thanks for sharing about the lemurs book! The combination of natural science/ethnography sounds interesting.
ext_15169: Self-portrait (lemur)

[identity profile] speakr2customrs.livejournal.com 2005-02-20 02:41 am (UTC)(link)
Thanks. I hadn't heard about the discovery of two new lemur species.