Book

The Bakairí Indians of Brazil: politics, ecology, and change

Waveland PressProspects Heights, Ill. • Published In 2000 • Pages:

By: Picchi, Debra.

Abstract
Picchi has written this monograph on the Bakairí for an undergraduate-level course. The book begins with a general discussion of fieldwork and ends with a 18-page learning guide. She takes a political ecological approach and focuses on the relationships between the Bakairí, their environment, and the state as represented by the Brazilian National Indian Foundation (FUNAI). She examines the rise in political conscious as they defend their land from homesteaders and ranchers, and travel to international conferences, forming their own political association, Kura-Bakairí. She also examines their adaptation to ranching, rice cultivation, and wage labor, at the same time, recasting their own indigenous roots and identity, and maintaining their important mask dance ceremonies.
Subjects
Acculturation and culture contact
Environmental quality
Production and supply
Visual arts
Community heads
Public welfare
Political movements
Spirits and gods
Organized ceremonial
culture
Bakairi
HRAF PubDate
2004
Region
South America
Sub Region
Amazon and Orinoco
Document Type
Book
Evaluation
Creator Type
Ethnologist
Document Rating
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
Ian Skoggard ; 2002
Field Date
1979-1981, 1989-1999
Coverage Date
1940-1999
Coverage Place
Bakairí reservation, Mato Grosso, Brazil
Notes
Debra Picchi
Includes bibliographical references (p. 203-212) and index
LCCN
00711259
LCSH
Bakairi Indians