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Ownership and Nurture: Studies in Native Amazonian Property Relations PDF

285 Pages·2016·3.411 MB·English
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Ownership and Nurture Ownership and Nurture Studies in Native Amazonian Property Relations Edited by Marc Brightman, Carlos Fausto and Vanessa Grotti berghahn N E W Y O R K • O X F O R D www.berghahnbooks.com Published in 2016 by Berghahn Books www.berghahnbooks.com © 2016 Marc Brightman, Carlos Fausto and Vanessa Grotti All rights reserved. Except for the quotation of short passages for the purposes of criticism and review, no part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system now known or to be invented, without written permission of the publisher. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: Brightman, Marc, editor. | Fausto, Carlos, editor. | Grotti, Vanessa Elisa, editor. Title: Ownership and nurture : studies in native Amazonian property relations / edited by Marc Brightman, Carlos Fausto and Vanessa Grotti. Description: New York : Berghahn Books, 2016. | Includes bibliographical references and index. Identifi ers: LCCN 2015045877| ISBN 9781785330834 (hardback : alk. paper) | ISBN 9781785330841 (ebook) Subjects: LCSH: Indians of South America—Material culture—Amazon River Region. | Indians of South America—Land tenure—Amazon River Region. | Material culture—Amazon River Region. | Land tenure—Amazon River Region. Classifi cation: LCC F2230.1.M34 O86 2016 | DDC 981/.13—dc23 LC record available at hjp://lccn.loc.gov/2015045877 British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library ISBN 978-1-78533-083-4 hardback ISBN 978-1-78533-084-1 ebook Contents List of Figures vii Foreword by James Leach ix Acknowledgements xiii Introduction. Altering Ownership in Amazonia 1 Marc Brightman, Carlos Fausto and Vanessa Grotti 1. Masters, Slaves and Real People: Native Understandings of Ownership and Humanness in Tropical American Capturing Societies 36 Fernando Santos-Granero 2. First Contacts, Slavery and Kinship in North-Eastern Amazonia 63 Vanessa Grotti and Marc Brightman 3. Fabricating Necessity: Feeding and Commensality in Western Amazonia 81 Luiz Costa 4. Parasitism and Subjection: Modes of Paumari Predation 110 Oiara Bonilla 5. How Much for a Song? The Culture of Calculation and the Calculation of Culture 133 Carlos Fausto 6. The Forgotten Pattern and the Stolen Design: Contract, Exchange and Creativity Among the K˜ısêdjê 156 Marcela Stockler Coelho de Souza 7. Doubles and Owners: Relations of Knowledge, Property and Authorship among the Marubo 186 Pedro de Niemeyer Cesarino vi Contents 8. Ownership and Wellbeing among the Mebêngôkre-Xikrin: Differentiation and Ritual Crisis 209 Cesar Gordon 9. Temporalities of Ownership: Land Possession and its Transformations among the Tupinambá (Bahia, Brazil) 232 Susana de Matos Viegas Index 257 Figures 5.1 Aluminium pans received by the owners of the Takwaga festival. Kuikuro village of Ipatse, Xingu Indigenous Park, Brazil, 1998. Photo: Carlos Fausto. 136 5.2 A young woman with chiefl y status leading an internal luki. Kuikuro Village of Ipatse, Xingu Indigenous Park, Brazil, 2013. Photo: Carlos Fausto. 138 5.3 Matü confects the akunga, the shamanic doll. Kuikuro Village of Ipatse, Xingu Indigenous Park, Brazil, 2002. Photo: Carlos Fausto. 140 5.4 Kanu sings during a Jamugikumalu festival. Kuikuro Village of Ipatse, Xingu Indigenous Park, Brazil, 2010. Photo: Carlos Fausto. 146 6.1 A K˜ısêdjê couple in full regalia. K˜ısêdjê Kap˜er˜e: alfabetização na língua suyá. São Paulo: ISA/Fafo, 1999. 159 6.2 Anhi ro kütêmtêm, ‘a spiral on me.’ Drawing: Wetanti Suyá, 2006. 161 6.3 Tepsôk nhõ sôkô, ‘wooden lip plug design.’ Drawing: Wetamtxi Suyá, 2006. 161 6.4 Anhi ro roptxi, ‘a jaguar on me.’ Drawing: Wetantxi Suyá, 2006. 161 6.5 Recreating the Pyj design: the si pattern. Ngôjhwêrê village, Xingu Indigenous Park, Brazil, 2006. Photo: M.S. Coelho de Souza. 164 6.6 Recreating the Pyj design: fi lling in the si with the kango pattern. Ngôjhwêrê village, Xingu Indigenous Park, Brazil, 2006. Photo: M.S. Coelho de Souza. 164 viii Figures 6.7 The s˜ıpê and kajngõrõ design patterns. Ngôjhwêrê village, Xingu Indigenous Park, Brazil, 2006. Photo: M.S. Coelho de Souza. 165 6.8 Formal transformations of the Pyj pattern. Drawing: M.S. Coelho de Souza, 2009. 166 6.9 The chief Kuiussi painted with the anhi ro ku˜ntêmtêm and the ndo sôkô patterns. Ngôjhwêrê village, Xingu Indigenous Park, Brazil, 2007. Photo: M.S. Coelho de Souza. 176 6.10 The facial pattern ndo sôkô. Drawing produced during the Grendene workshop, Ngôjhwêrê village, Xingu Indigenous Park, Brazil, 2006. Photo: M.S. Coelho de Souza. 176 6.11 The lip plug design painted on the Wadubati’s back. Ngôjhwêrê village, Xingu Indigenous Park, Brazil, 2007. Photo: M.S. Coelho de Souza. 177 7.1 Paulino Joaquim Memãpa, ‘Earth Planting Spirits.’ Coloured pencil, graphite and watercolour on paper, 210 x 297 mm, 2005. Collection of Pedro Cesarino. 190 7.2 Paulino Memãpa, ‘The Emergence of Kana Voã.’ Coloured pencil, graphite and felt tip pen on paper, 210 x 297 mm, 2005. Collection of Pedro Cesarino. 191 9.1 A dwelling place. Diagram by Susana Matos Viegas. 237 9.2 Genealogical diagram showing distant places of residence in the territory. Diagram by Susana Matos Viegas. 242 9.3 A non-plastered casa de sopapo or casa de taipa de mão. Bahia, Brazil, 1998. Photo: Susana Matos Viegas. 243 9.4 The hole from which clay was extracted for a home in a kin- based dwelling. Acuípe, Bahia, Brazil, 2004. Photo: Susana Matos Viegas. 244 Foreword Ownership and nurture. What if we begin here, rather than with the Lockean assumption of nature, commonly given to be appropriated by human labour? What if ownership did not take for its template a world of human subjects in rightful control over inanimate objects, but the nurture of kin, or of animals? What if nur- ture also implied superiority, or even capture? Or it implied mutual depen- dence: an externalized capacity for self-defi nition? These are questions this volume suggests we should ask. And then, what happens when ownership over other persons linked to nurture is absolute and institutionalized? Or objects directly constitute human persons through their ability to inscribe human qualities? Or when owning comes in many different forms? When in fact ‘the form and nature of transactions defi nes the relationships be- tween the objects and transactors involved’?1 Well, for a start we will need to think again about what property, ownership and belonging implies, how it is achieved, and under what circumstances. Just for a moment, imagine that all that you are, your very fl esh and blood, your body and all that you know, arise and have their origins in specifi c other people. (Is this so far-fetched?). Those other people have laboured to produce you, have dedicated their capacities and efforts to the production of your existence. The substance that makes and sustains your body, the foods that give it solidity and have grown it, the knowledge that allows you to do anything: this is what connects you to those other people. Your status as a human being is dependent upon the recognition of this reality. There is nothing exclusive about your body because it is al- ways the outcome and interest of others. In turn, what you do with your body is not only infl uenced by the ongoing history of your emergence in relation to other people (and powers) but actually only possible because of those relations. Close family take different roles in constituting the very body you operate. More distant kin provide other elements appropriate to their relation and interest in you. Your body is always their interest, and whatever you can produce has to be thought about in terms of how you

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