book chapter

Ritual structure

Sacha Runa : ethnicity and adaptation of Ecuadorian jungle Quichua , Norman E. Whitten, Jr., with the assistance of Marcelo F. Naranjo, Marcelo Santi Simban?a, Dorothea S. WhittenUrbana • Published In 1976 • Pages: 165-202, 313-323

By: Whitten, Norman E..

Abstract
Once or twice a year a large-scale ceremony is held in and near the administrative locus of each of the territories of the Canelos Quichua. Although this ceremony has no name other than [n]jista[/n], from the Spanish [i]fiesta[/i], and although the Catholic Church has formally and conscientiously contributed to some aspects of the public ceremony, it is nonetheless a central characteristic of Canelos Quichua culture (p.167). This paper describes in great detail the various elements of this [n]Allu[/n] Ceremony from its initial preparation, two or three weeks before its actual enactment to the final Sunday feast day.
Subjects
Organized ceremonial
Ordering of time
Kindreds and ramages
Alcoholic beverages
Dance
Music
Animism
Ingroup antagonisms
culture
Canelos Quichua
HRAF PubDate
2010
Region
South America
Sub Region
Amazon and Orinoco
Document Type
book chapter
Evaluation
Creator Type
Ethnologist
Document Rating
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
John Beierle; 2009
Field Date
1968-1975
Coverage Date
1968-1975
Coverage Place
western Pastaza province, Ecuador
Notes
Norman E. Whitten, Jr.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 313-323)
LCCN
75028350
LCSH
Canelo Indians--Social life and customs
Canelo Indians--Government relations
Puyo (Pastaza, Ecuador)--Social life and customs