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197 Pages·2005·0.45 MB·English
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Ari ixanti: Speech reporting practices among the Nanti of the Peruvian Amazon by Lev David Michael, B.A. Thesis Presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School of The University of Texas at Austin in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts The University of Texas at Austin December 2001 i Ari ixanti: Speech reporting practices among the Nanti of the Peruvian Amazon by Lev David Michael, B.A. Thesis Presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School of The University of Texas at Austin in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts The University of Texas at Austin December 2001 ii Copyright by Lev David Michael 2001 iii Ari ixanti: Speech reporting practices among the Nanti of the Peruvian Amazon APPROVED BY SUPERVISING COMMITTEE: __________________________ __________________________ iv For Michael v Acknowledgements This thesis springs from the relationship that individuals in the Nanti communities of Montetoni and Maranxejari tentatively began, extended, strengthened, negotiated, and renegotiated with me and Chris Beier from 1995 to 2001. The work before you was made possible by the trust that the people in these communities gave me the opportunity to earn, and the patience that they usually evinced, even during systematic inquiry into minutiae like the details of migration routes or syllable stress that became tedious even to me at times. Most of the residents of these two communities have at one time or another, and frequently more than once, taken time out of their day to talk with us, answer questions we have posed, and visited us as part of their daily visiting rounds. Some individuals, however, have contributed substantial portions of their time to help us with our research, and I want to thank them personally: Ajorora, Anteres, Barentin, Bisarota, Bixotoro, Esexira, Tsyabera, Tyejerina, Joja, and Migero. My debt to Chris Beier, my partner in working with the Nanti communities and in life more generally, is incalculable. With respect to the present work, Chris has been my interlocutor in innumerable conversations in which many of the ideas presented in this study were first hatched. It is difficult to say, in many instances, where my ideas begin and where those that which arose from our fruitful interactions end. Without Chris’ support and able partnership both in the field and at home, it is unlikely that I would have been able to achieve a small fraction of what we have accomplished together. Joel Sherzer directed my inchoate fascination with the nexus of language, cognition, and social interaction. He has provided me with what I believe is a rare mixture of direction, encouragement, and freedom to explore that I very much value. i If this work has any merit, it will owe much to Elizabeth Keating, whose acute criticisms helped me refine vague ideas, to support my claims with solid data, and to excise what I could not support. Tony Woodbury has on many occasions brought my attention to new ways to think about the phenomena I examine in this study, and has been a steady source of encouragement during the long processes of bringing this work to term. David and Judy Payne, who have also carried out linguistic research among the Nanti, have been affable interlocutors in discussions about the Nanti language and have been generous with data they have gathered. Their colleagues, Betty and Wayne Snell have also been generous in sharing unpublished data on Matsigenka gathered over the course of several decades. Carolina Izquierdo shared with Chris Beier and myself several memorable experiences in the Urubamba River valley. Her research on Matsigenka medicinal practices also fruitfully challenged me to deepen my study of Nanti medicinal practices. Glenn Shepard has been an invaluable source of comparative ethnographic and linguistic information about the Matsigenka of the Manu region, and has usefully challenged me to rethink several of my ethnographic and linguistic conclusions. Nathaniel Gerhart was our companion on two visits to Montetoni; his ornithological expertise has contributed to my understanding of Nanti hunting practices and our collaborative research on Nanti knowledge of local avifauna has proved fruitful for both ethnographic and linguistic purposes. Not least of all, I wish to acknowledge and thank those who have at various times, and for various reasons, provided financial support that made possible the research upon which this thesis is based. Charlie Munn provided funding for our1998 fieldwork, and arranged for Nathaniel Gerhart to join us. His financial support came at a particularly critical time during our work with the Nanti of ii Montetoni and Maranxejari, and I thank him for it. The University of Texas Liberal Arts Graduate Research Fellowship I received for research during the summer of 2001 supported research on this and other topics related to the Nanti language. Finally, I wish to thank the financial supporters of Cabeceras Aid Project. While Cabeceras Aid Project has never directly supported my research activities, it has made possible my work with Nanti communities of the upper Xamisuja on matters of importance to the community. The joint work has been of incredible importance in building a relationship of trust with the communities, without which my ongoing research would be impossible. iii Ari ixanti: Speech reporting practices among the Nanti of the Peruvian Amazon by Lev David Michael, M.A. The University of Texas at Austin, 2001 SUPERVISOR: Joel Sherzer This study examines speech reporting practices among the Nanti, a small Arawakan indigenous group living in the southeastern Peruvian Amazon. The goals of the study are to provide an empirical description of Nanti speech reporting practices and a theoretical account for their patterning and organization. A descriptive framework using the concept of speech reporting strategies is developed and then used to describe Nanti speech reporting practices. The organization of Nanti speech reporting practices is accounted for in terms of a model that takes speaking practices to be emergent patterns of language use arising from the interplay of language ideologies with the communicative needs of individuals in concrete interactions. Nanti speech reporting practices are found to be organized into two major spheres, one concerned with the transmission of orally-obtained knowledge, and the other with the representation of human agency and evaluative positions. The former sphere is analyzed as arising from ideologies of knowledge that privelege direct experience over inference and hearsay, while the latter is analyzed as arising from ideologies that take discussions of talk and physical action to be the appropriate means for communicting about agency and evaluative position. iv

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Ari ixanti: Speech reporting practices among the Nanti of the Peruvian of Anna Karenina's speech in the eponymous novel and argue that Tolstoi
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