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From “Acculturated Indians” to “Dynamic Amazonian QuichuaSpeaking Peoples”
Author:
Michael Arthur Uzendoski Benson
Published by:
sandra rochina
Related topics:
Document:
Published and/or Presented at:
Uzendoski Benson, Michael Arthur and Norman E. Jr Whitten. 2014. From “Acculturated Indians” to “Dynamic Amazonian Quichua-Speaking Peoples. Tipití. Journal of the Society for the Anthropology of Lowland South America, (12)1: 1-13.
Link:
http://
Summary:
In the twenty-first century books such as Michael Uzendoski’s The Napo Runa of Amazonian Ecuador (2005), Norman Whitten and Dorothea Scott Whitten’s Puyo Runa: Imagery and Power in Modern Amazonia (2003), Uzendoski and Edith Calapucha-Tapuy’s The Ecology of the Spoken Word: Amazonian Storytelling and Shamanism among the Napo Runa (2012), Janis Nuckolls’ Lessons from a Quechua Strongwoman: Ideophony, Dialogue, and Perspective (2010), and Eduardo Kohn’s How Forests Think: Toward an Anthropology Beyond the Human (2013), it is made clear that Amazonian Quichua-Quechua-speaking people manifest central paradigms of power and dynamic cultural systems that serve both as axes of interculturality and templates for cultural continuity and transformation. To establish the contextual basis for this special topic, we turn now to a brief introduction to, and overview of, Amazonian Quichua-speaking people of Ecuador.