Book

From the Milk River: spatial and temporal processes in northwest Amazonia

Cambridge University PressCambridge • Published In 1979 • Pages: xx, 302

By: Hugh-Jones, Christine.

Abstract
This is a study of the Barasana Indians living along the Pirá;-paraná river in the Vaupés region of the Colombian northwest Amazon. The material was gathered by the author during her fieldwork among the Barasana from September 1968 to December 1970. After a presentation of some basic ethnographic information on the Barasana (e.g., social structure family and patrilineal groups, religious and secular specialists, kinship and marriage, life cycle, etc.), Hugh-Jones attempts to demonstrate how these cultural aspects of Tucano society '…are ideologically integrated just as they are also inextricably bound together in concrete behavior' (p. 2). In order to accomplish this the author established a number of theoretical models based on analogy and metaphorical usage, connecting cultural data to religious symbolism, myth, and cosmology.
Subjects
Mode of marriage
Shamans and psychotherapists
Cosmology
Mythology
Organized ceremonial
Menstruation
Puberty and initiation
culture
Tukano
HRAF PubDate
1998
Region
South America
Sub Region
Amazon and Orinoco
Document Type
Book
Evaluation
Creator Type
Ethnologist
Document Rating
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
John Beierle ; 1996
Field Date
September 1968-December 1970
Coverage Date
1968-1970
Coverage Place
Barasana Indians; Vaupés region, Colombian northwest Amazon
Notes
Christine Hugh-Jones
Based on the author's thesis, Cambridge University, 1977
Includes bibliographical references (p. 291-292) and index
LCCN
78073126
LCSH
Tukano Indians