Education
Brooklyn College.
Brooklyn College.
Though she never received a formal degree in anthropology, she conducted extensive fieldwork among the !Kung San people of the Kalahari desert in south-western Africa and was widely known for her descriptions of the lives of women in this hunter-gatherer society. Shostak was raised in Brooklyn, New New York In 1969-1971, Shostak and Konner lived among the !Kung San in the Dobe region of southwest Africa, on the border between Botswana and South Africa.
There they learned the !Kung language and conducted anthropological fieldwork.
Shostak"s book on the subject, Nisa: The and Words of a !Kung Woman, was first published by Harvard University Press in 1981, and is now a standard work in anthropology. lieutenant weaves together the different voices of Shostak and Nisa, alternating between anthropological observation and the life story of a "primitive" woman told in her own words.
In the book Shostak argues that !Kung San women had higher status and autonomy than women in Western cultures because of their food contributions. During the 1980s, Shostak and Konner also wrote two popular books and a number of articles advocating a "Paleolithic diet".
Though there have been some disputes over the full benefits of such a diet and how it should be implemented, the basic idea is that many illnesses found in agricultural and industrialized societies result at least in part from diets that differ significantly from those that human beings evolved to eat.
Shostak and Konner had three children together. She also taught courses in anthropology on life history methods and the Kalahari. In 1991 Shostak, following treatment for breast cancer, returned to the Kalahari to interview Nisa again.
She died in 1996, aged 51, while her second book, Return to Nisa, was in preparation.
lieutenant was released posthumously in 2000. In it, Shostak describes a traditional ceremony in Botswana in which Nisa attempted to heal Shostak"s cancer.