essay

Effects of contact on revenge hostilities among the Achuará Jívaro

warfare, culture, and environmentOrlando, Fla. • Published In 1984 • Pages: 83-109

By: Bennett Ross, Jane.

Abstract
In this article, Ross examines how internecine conflict among the Jivaro intensified with commercial penetration in the post-contact era. According to Ross, feuds were periodic and originally related to ecological factors, however with the slave trade, rubber boom, gold rush, and in the 20th century, lumbering, Europeans made alliances with certain groups to keep the area safe for commerce, which created the basis for perpetual warfare. Ross focuses on the Achuará, a less studied Jivaro group living along the headwaters and middle ranges of the Pastaza and Morona rivers. In this region, the collection of cinchona bark to make quinine was the principle commercial activity followed by cattle ranching. Shrunken heads were exchanged for guns, escalating fighting between groups. Jivaro groups also blamed epidemics on each other, precipitating additional raids and killing. Ross analyzes a 1973 killing and the failure of commercial interests and relations to trump kinship relations and need for retribution.
Subjects
Acculturation and culture contact
Settlement patterns
Inter-community relations
External relations
Instigation of war
Warfare
culture
Jivaro
HRAF PubDate
2000
Region
South America
Sub Region
Amazon and Orinoco
Document Type
essay
Evaluation
Creator Type
Ethnologist
Document Rating
4: Excellent Secondary Data
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
Ian Skoggard; 2005
Field Date
1973-1974
Coverage Date
1815-1974
Coverage Place
Peru and Ecuador
Notes
Jane Bennett Ross
Includes bibliographical references (p. 107-109)
Hans Stade was a captive among an eastern Brazilian tribe from 1547 to 1555.
LCCN
83021452
LCSH
Jivaro Indians/Shuar Indians