We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
Between Friends and Enemies: The Dynamics of Interethnic Relations in Amazonian Ecuador.
- Authors
Reeve, Mary-Elizabeth; High, Casey
- Abstract
This article examines the shifting nature of interethnic relations between two indigenous groups in Amazonian Ecuador, the Curaray River group of lowland Kichwa and the neighboring Waorani of the Curaray region. Waorani and Curaray Kichwa interaction from the 1930s to the present reveals a pattern marked by oscillations between hostilities and cautious friendship. These shifts are expressed in varied social relations described in the anthropological and historical scholarship on Amazonia, ranging from shamanic attack to marriage alliances. The paper explores this history and its linkage to wider social changes in the region brought about by Protestant evangelization and international economic interests. Our ethnographic analysis points to the maintenance of extended family linkages between Kichwa and Waorani in the Curaray River region as nodal relationships that potennate shifts from hostilities to friendship between the two indigenous groups. These shifts occur within a regional interaction sphere that is bound together by extended family ties between specific household groups. By examining these relations through the lenses of both Waorani and Curaray Kichwa ethnography and of historical processes extending back almost a century, the article provides insights into a complex sociality involving distinct indigenous peoples across a multiethnic region of the Western Amazon.
- Subjects
AMAZON River Region; ECUADOR; ETHNIC relations; INDIGENOUS peoples of Ecuador; ETHNIC conflict; ECUADORIAN history, 1830-; INTERETHNIC friendship; HUAO (South American people); SHAMANS; ETHNICITY; SOCIAL history
- Publication
Ethnohistory, 2012, Vol 59, Issue 1, p141
- ISSN
0014-1801
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1215/00141801-1435410