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A Far Corner:Life and Art with the Open Circle Tribe

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A Far Corner
Life and Art with the Open Circle Tribe
Scott Ezell

hardcover2015. 344 pp.
978-0-8032-6522-6
$27.95 t


In 2002, after living ten years in Asia, American poet and musician Scott Ezell used his advance from a local record company to move to Dulan, on Taiwan’s remote Pacific coast. He fell in with the Open Circle Tribe, a loose confederation of aboriginal woodcarvers, painters, and musicians who lived on the beach and cultivated a living connection with their indigenous heritage. Most members of the Open Circle Tribe belong to the Amis tribe, which is descended from Austronesian peoples that migrated from China thousands of years ago. As a “nonstate” people navigating the fraught politics of contemporary Taiwan, the Amis of the Open Circle Tribe exhibit, for Ezell, the best characteristics of life at the margins, striving to create art and to live autonomous, unorthodox lives.

In Dulan, Ezell joined song circles and was invited on an extended hunting expedition; he weathered typhoons, had love affairs, and lost close friends. In A Far Corner Ezell draws on these experiences to explore issues on a more global scale, including the multiethnic nature of modern society, the geopolitical relationship between the United States, Taiwan, and China, and the impact of environmental degradation on indigenous populations. The result is a beautifully crafted and personal evocation of a sophisticated culture that is almost entirely unknown to Western readers.
 
Scott Ezell is a writer and artist living in California and Asia. He is the author ofPetroglyph Americana and the chapbook Hanoi Rhapsodies, and is the editor and coauthor of Songs from a Yahi Bow.
“This is a marvelous journey into the worlds of indigenous peoples in the coastal, seaside mountains of Taiwan, pursuing their age-old habits in the backwaters of empires, Chinese and Japanese, old and modern. Ezell, a young American musician and poet, writes with fine story-telling skill.”—John Balaban, author of Remembering Heaven’s Face

“Scott Ezell is a highly talented, very imagistic writer who packs his work with action and colorful sensory-driven details. He has a knack for showing us a people from an insider as well as an outsider perspective. Ezell writes in a beautiful, lyrical prose style that is colorful and full of texture and emotion.”—Mark Spitzer, author of Season of the Gar 

“Reading Scott Ezell’s A Far Corner I gradually became absorbed and actually delighted. Like true adventures this story is about something which, chances are, you will know nothing and consequently become pleasurably informed.”—Jim Harrison, author of Returning to Earth
 


“There’s magic in this brilliant, lyrical, and deeply informed ethnography. Ezell, happily, never gets in the way of the Austronesian artists, musicians, and craftsmen whose self-conscious recreation and performance of indigenous identity he has so closely and sympathetically observed. So much comprehension has rarely come with so much pleasure and satisfaction.”—James C. Scott, Sterling Professor of Political Science and Anthropology, Yale University

Yi-Ling Chen 5小時 ·
About Dulan written by Scott Szell. Thanks to Douglas Newton for bringing me to Dulan to rediscover the marvelous homeland. 都蘭的故事,我第一次去都蘭,就是住這個作者的家,在山的盡頭一個農舍,我睡在熟悉的公媽廳的禢塌米地板,卻好像在加州一樣,非常的錯置,好像在台灣又好像不像。之後,每半年總要去一次都蘭,每次都有滿滿的感動,直到觀光客改變都蘭。那種永遠都有一群喝酒的朋友,離世界很遠,自成一格的生活模式,好都蘭。...**

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