High / Costa | The Lowland South American World | Buch | 978-0-367-40630-1 | www.sack.de

Buch, Englisch, 756 Seiten, Format (B × H): 175 mm x 250 mm, Gewicht: 1460 g

Reihe: Routledge Worlds

High / Costa

The Lowland South American World


1. Auflage 2024
ISBN: 978-0-367-40630-1
Verlag: Routledge

Buch, Englisch, 756 Seiten, Format (B × H): 175 mm x 250 mm, Gewicht: 1460 g

Reihe: Routledge Worlds

ISBN: 978-0-367-40630-1
Verlag: Routledge


The Lowland South American World showcases cutting-edge research on the anthropology of Lowland South America, providing both an in-depth knowledge of Lowland South American life ways and engaging readers in urgent social, environmental, and political issues in the contemporary world.

Covering the vast expanse of a region that includes all of South America except for the Andes, its 40 chapters engage with questions of what “Lowland South America” means as a geographical designation, both in studies of Indigenous Amazonian peoples and other lowland areas of the continent. They emphasize the multiple ways that local practices and cosmologies challenge conventional Western ideas about nature, culture, personhood, sociality, community, and Indigenous people.

Some of the region’s well-known contributions to anthropology, such as animism, perspectivism, and novel approaches to the body are updated here with new ethnography and in light of the varying political situations in which the region’s peoples find themselves. With contributions by authors from 15 different countries, including a number of Indigenous anthropologists and activists, this book will set the agenda for future research in the continent.

The Lowland South American World is a valuable resource for scholars and students of anthropology, Latin American studies and Indigenous studies, as well as history, geography and other social sciences.

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Zielgruppe


Postgraduate


Autoren/Hrsg.


Weitere Infos & Material


Re-imagining Lowland South America: An Introduction  Part 1: Colonial Legacies, Indigenous Histories 1. The Enigma of Ashaninka Endowarfare: Cultural Dictate or Historical Product? 2. Labor, Resistance, and Politics: Indigenous Agency in the Bolivian Rubber Boom 3. Christianity and Christians in Amazonia 4. Guianese Maroons in an Amazonian Ethnological Landscape  Part 2: Myth, Memory and Storytelling  5. The Origin Myth of a Myth: The ‘Land without Evil’ Revisited 6. A Matrix of Knowledge: Indigenous Histories and Indigenous Anthropology in Brazil 7. The Work of Desire: Alterity and Exogamy in a Kotiria Origin Myth from the Northwest Amazon 8. Storytelling, Textuality and Experience in Lowland South America 9. Eras and Events: Contrasting Amazonian Narratives of the Past  Part 3: The Substance of Life: Making Real People  10. Birth in Amazonia: Transforming Responsibility in the Care Encounter  11. Detachable Persons, Porous Bodies, and the Art of Love in the Argentinian Chaco  12. The Imports of Uncertainty in the Tragedy of a Man of Substance  13. A World More Bearable in Which to Live: Three Ethnographic Examples from Lowland South America  14. The ways of food and feathers: Revisiting the Bororo Literature  Part 4: Land, Territory and Mobility 15. Darawate: Native Amazonian Trail Signals and other Ephemeral Plant Scripts  16. Regenerating Life: Indigenous Landscapes on the Atlantic Coast of Northeast Brazil  17 Language and Territory in Mapuche Ritual Practices in Chile (Zugun ka mapu mapuche gijañmawün mew Gülu püle)  18. Paths and Networks Beyond the Human in Amazonian Social Worlds  19. Amazonian Environmental Activism at COP26: A Conversation with Uboye Gaba Part 5: Ownership, Mastery and Exchange  20. Child, Pet, and Prey: Relations of Dependence in Amazonia  21. Mastery Without Servitude: On Freedom and Dependence in Amazonia 22. A Politics of Regard: Action and Influence in Lowland South America  23. Pets and Domesticated Animals in Lowland South A


Casey High is Senior Lecturer in Social Anthropology at the University of Edinburgh. His research with Waorani communities in Ecuador over the past 25 years has focused on memory, language, collaborative anthropology, and Amazonian environmental activism in response to oil development.

Luiz Costa is Associate Professor of Anthropology at the Institute of Philosophy and Social Sciences of the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, and a member of the Graduate Programme in Social Anthropology at the National Museum. He has carried out research with the Kanamari of southwestern Amazonia since 2002.



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