The Pagan Tribes of Borneo

audiobook

The Pagan Tribes of Borneo

by Charles Hose, William McDougall

EN·~20 hours

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Description

The book offers a thorough portrait of the indigenous peoples who inhabited Borneo at the close of the nineteenth century. Drawing on decades of direct service in Sarawak and a year‑long anthropological expedition, the authors combine personal observation, extensive conversations, and meticulous field notes to describe daily life, belief systems, and social customs. Their aim is to present an unembellished view, grounded in firsthand experience rather than second‑hand reports.

Both collaborators spent long periods living among the tribes, sharing meals, staying in their homes, and traveling deep into untouched interior valleys. Their accounts are enriched with photographs, sketches, and detailed measurements that reveal the physical characteristics and ethnic relationships of the groups. The work also includes a scholarly appendix that discusses the results of systematic bodily surveys conducted during their stay.

Listeners will find a vivid, almost tactile record of a world that has largely disappeared, offering valuable insight for anyone fascinated by anthropology, history, or the cultural tapestry of Southeast Asia.

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Details

Full title

The Pagan Tribes of Borneo A Description of Their Physical Moral and Intellectual Condition, with Some Discussion of Their Ethnic Relations

Language

en

Duration

~20 hours (1157K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2002-07-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the authors

Charles Hose

Charles Hose

1863–1929

A British explorer-administrator with a deep interest in Borneo’s peoples and wildlife, he turned years of field experience into books that still attract readers of travel, anthropology, and natural history. His writing offers a vivid window into Sarawak at the turn of the 20th century.

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William McDougall

William McDougall

1871–1938

An early psychologist who helped popularize the study of instinct and social behavior, he taught at Oxford, Harvard, and Duke and wrote books that shaped debate in the early 1900s. His work ranged from mainstream psychology to controversial interests such as psychical research, which kept his name in discussion long after his lifetime.

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