This unique interpretation of Ethiopian society uses the tools of history, sociology, anthropology, and psychology to examine three main What is the nature of the traditional culture of the Amhara, and what are its enduring values and beliefs? What aspects of modern culture interest this society and by means has it sought to institutionalize them? How does tradition both facilitate and impede Ethiopian efforts to modernization? Using the insights and the tools of several disciplines, Professor Donald Levine looks on Amhara culture as history, as an outlook on life, a way of growing up, a social structure, a kind of psychological orientation, and, finally, as a combination of opposites. With acuity and sensitivity he describes the strains upon the traditional culture made by the needs for modernization and the problems which face young and old in making this rapid transition. The author has found one key to Ethiopian society in its poetry, where the wax is the obvious meaning, the gold the hidden meaning. He finds reflections of this ambiguity at all levels of Ethiopian culture and holds that an appreciation of it is essential to understanding the problems facing Ethiopians in their movement toward modernization and their unique role among African nations. Since its first publication, forty years ago, Wax and Gold has became a basic source for the studies of Ethiopia and a provocative model for the study of African and other modernizing nations.
A moving portrait full of those rare insights only the most dedicated and humane researchers could draw from what is often seen as an opaque and hard people. Not content to be one of the relatively few studies in the field (at least at time Levine wrote it) the book also demonstrate that the "pick-n-mix" approach, if done correctly, can meet the need of both the amateur and the specialist: history, ethnography and sociology meet in a convincing picture of the amharas, traditionals and moderns, past and present. One may have only wished Levine steered away from the psychoanalitic model of chapter 6, which, tellingly and unlike the rest of the book, brings little to the table in terms of negotiating modernization.
This book probably deserves a higher rating, but it's dated, and some of the dated sociological/anthropological/psychological analysis was just distracting. It was extremely interesting, though, and Levine clearly did his homework: great level of detail in his analysis.
Wax and gold refers to the subtle way that Amhara Ethiopians have of talking, and of writing poetry. It is a great descriptor of their cultural personality in general: prizing cleverness, and of hiding hard truths in a gentle veneer. There was a lot of significant insight into how Amhara people are adjusting to modernity (although it's published in 1965, so it's also very interesting to hear his predictions regarding the future of Ethiopia).
I wouldn't recommend this to just any Ethiophile; it takes the kind who would also read the Silmarillion and the Lost Tales of Numenor.
slow going at first but became a quick read as more of it gradually became relevant to my studies. i agree with other reviewers that the psychoanalytic perspectives are of most questionable use (as are its paltry descriptions of music) but much of the rest of it is illuminating indeed and at times very moving. written before the 1974 revolution, it appears truly prophetic. appears oft-cited in subsequent literature; i’ll be returning to this.
Full of insights about the Amhara culture that still resonate today ... for my tastes it could only be better if written in a more engaging style as opposed to the very dry, academic prose that, at times, inhibited forward momentum for this reader. That said, the book is indispensable for any westerner trying to understand or come to terms with life in Ethiopia.
A brief research of this oldest ‘Christian’ country. A western sociologist looks at the complex history of the ancient civilization of Ethiopia. A frame on current unrest, brutality, and tribal antipathy.