Review: Greek Island Life: Fieldwork on Anafi by Margaret E. Kenna

Review: Greek Island Life: Fieldwork on Anafi by Margaret E. Kenna

Greek Island Life: Fieldwork on Anafi
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Description (from Amazon.com)

Sixteen months on a small Greek island? Not the holiday of a lifetime, but the start of anthropologist Margaret E. Kenna’s involvement with the residents of Anafi and its migrant community in Athens. Greek Island Life gives a vivid and engaging account of research on Anafi in the 1960s, and is based on letters, progress reports, field-notes and diary entries made at the time. Since then the author has returned to the island many times and her later impressions and knowledge are integrated into the earlier texts. The islanders, who once regarded themselves to be so remote as to be ‘far from God’, are now making a living from tourism, marketing their island as an unspoilt idyll. Anyone interested in Greece and travel will find this book illuminating and captivating, as will students and teachers of anthropology, sociology, modern history, travel writing and Modern Greek studies.


5 stars

My Thoughts

Anthropological research can seem boring, especially if it’s presented in way that resembles anything you once had to put a paper book cover on while in school. But every once in a while, there is a book that relates anthropological findings in a way that is accessible and easy to read.

Greek Island Life: Fieldwork on Anafi by Margaret E. Kenna is one such book. While researching a novel (as yet unpublished), I needed information on the Greek island of Anafi. There really wasn’t much out there save a few mentions in texts from the 1800s. When I ran across this book, however, I was intrigued.

Kenna relates her fieldwork in a series of diary entries, letters, photographs and progress reports that really detail not only life on the island, but life as she saw it at that moment. Much of the information I gathered from reading the book came not from the analysis of data points months or years later, but from impressions written within a day of whatever happened. It was, in a very real way, like reading a memoir.

I rarely review non-fiction books, and as someone who does not have a degree in this particular subject, I cannot comment on the validity of the data or the research methods employed. I can, however, comment on the impact the book had on my need to learn more about Anafi, and I can say without reservation that Greek Island Life: Fieldwork on Anafi is a great read replete with drama, adventure and emotion. If my textbooks were like this in school, I might have done much better.

I have plans to visit Anafi in the future, and when I do, I will reread this book and compare notes.

Available at Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1907774866/


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