Unknown Mexico
A Record of Five Years' Exploration among the Tribes of the Western Sierra Madre
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:27th Oct '11
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

A two-volume account, published in 1903 by a Norwegian ethnographer, of the five years he spent among Mexican Indians.
In 1903 the Norwegian ethnographer and explorer Carl Lumholtz (1851–1922) published this two-volume account of the five years he spent living among indigenous tribes in the remote mountains of north-west Mexico. Volume 2 describes his experiences among the Huichols people.Carl Lumholtz (1851–1922) was a Norwegian ethnographer and explorer who, soon after publishing an influential study of Australian Aborigines (also reissued in the Cambridge Library Collection), spent five years researching native peoples in Mexico. This two-volume work, published in 1903, describes his expeditions to remote parts of north-west Mexico, inspired by reports about indigenous peoples who lived in cliff dwellings along mountainsides. While in the US in 1890 on a lecture tour, Lumholtz was able to raise sufficient funds for the expedition. He arrived in Mexico City that summer, and after meeting the president, Porfirio Díaz, he set off with a team of scientists for the Sierra Madre del Norte mountains in the north-west of Mexico, to find the cave-dwelling Tarahumare Indians. Volume 2 focuses mainly on the neighbouring Huichols people, their daily life, and their religious practices, including shamanism.
ISBN: 9781108033596
Dimensions: 229mm x 32mm x 152mm
Weight: 820g
566 pages