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The people of Taquile Island on the Peruvian side of beautiful Lake Titicaca, the highest navigable lake in the Americas, are renowned for the hand-woven textiles that they both wear and sell to outsiders. One thousand seven hundred Quechua-speaking peasant farmers, who depend on potatoes and the fish from the lake, host the forty thousand tourists who visit their island each year. Yet only twenty-five years ago, few tourists had even heard of Taquile. In Weaving a Future: Tourism, Cloth, and Culture on an Andean Island, Elayne Zorn documents the remarkable transformation of the isolated rocky island into a community-controlled enterprise that now provides a model for indigenous communities worldwide.

Over the course of three decades and nearly two years living on Taquile Island, Zorn, who is trained in both the arts and anthropology, learned to weave from Taquilean women. She also learned how gender structures both the traditional lifestyles and the changes that tourism and transnationalism have brought. In her comprehensive and accessible study, she reveals how Taquileans used their isolation, landownership, and communal organizations to negotiate the pitfalls of globalization and modernization and even to benefit from tourism. This multi-sited ethnography set in Peru, Washington, D.C., and New York City shows why and how cloth remains central to Andean society and how the marketing of textiles provided the experience and money for Taquilean initiatives in controlling tourism.

The first book about tourism in South America that centers on traditional arts as well as community control, Weaving a Future will be of great interest to anthropologists and scholars and practitioners of tourism, grassroots development, and the fiber arts.

鈥淓layne Zorn describes the successful efforts of the Taquileans to control their lands, their culture, and their future. The issues of retaining cultural identity are at the forefront of anthropology today, and few anthropologists offer so rounded a view of these issues. It is an extraordinary testimony to Zorn鈥檚 intelligence, dedication, and persistence that she has been able to transform so unusual a case鈥攁 group of weavers and farmers on an island in a remote lake鈥攊nto a story of such universal fascination.鈥濃擝en Orlove, editor, Current Anthropology

鈥淶orn鈥檚 book is an extraordinary achievement. It integrates in one engaging and highly readable account a thoughtful description and analysis of the weaving tradition on the Island of Taquile (Lake Titicaca, Peru) with informed and wide-ranging commentary on the commoditization of those weavings, the role of tourism in the transformation of the tradition over time, and the highly gendered nature of textile production and commentary among the weavers of Taquile. In its blending of the traditional with the transnational, Weaving a Future sets a new standard for research on Andean craft and commodity production. This will be an important work for many years to come.鈥濃擥ary Urton, Dumbarton Oaks Professor of Pre-Columbian Studies, Harvard University

鈥淓layne Zorn鈥檚 book on Taquile Island provides an insider鈥檚 anthropological view of one of South America鈥檚 most renowned and successful ecotourism communities. Zorn has been an acute observer of Taquile鈥檚 evolution as a tourist site for almost thirty years, and her vivid, personal, nuanced, and insightful writing brings to life this marvelous indigenous development story.鈥濃擪evin Healy, Inter-American Foundation and George Washington University

Paperback

ISBN-13
9780877459163
Retail price
$26.00

Publication Details

Publication Details

Publication Date
04/25/2004
Pages, art, trim size
224 pages, 40 photos, 1 map, 6 x 9 inches
Edition
1st