Tsewa's Gift: Magic and Meaning in an Amazonian Society
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"An outstanding and innovative study on hunting, gardening, and love magic among the Aguaruna. . . . [It is] both highly useful ethnographically and an important contribution to the understanding of how a primitive culture conceptualizes its transactions with nature. The book touches on cosmology and religion as well as the ethnoecology of hunting and agriculture--with an interlude on sex."
--American Ethnologist
Michael Brown
Michael and his wife, Utta, spent most of their working lives on the Somerset Levels, Michael involved in elvers and eels and establishing a smokery and later a smokery restaurant. Now retired they still live in the same house on the river Parrett where they stayed dry for over thirty years. Until January 2014 when one of the biggest floods ever seen on the Levels inundated their house and several others in the village of Thorney. They were to remain under water for over seven weeks.
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Tsewa's Gift - Michael Brown
Tsewa’s Gift
Tsewa’s Gift
Magic and Meaning in an Amazonian Society
Michael F. Brown
The University of Alabama Press
Tuscaloosa, Alabama
Copyright © 1986 The University of Alabama Press
Tuscaloosa, Alabama 35487-0380
All rights reserved. Manufactured in the United States of America
Reprinted 2007
Originally published by the Smithsonian Institution Press
∞
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Brown, Michael (Michael F.)
Tsewa’s gift.
Bibliography: p.
Includes index.
1. Aguaruna Indians—Religion and mythology. 2. Aguaruna Indians—Magic. 3. Aguaruna Indians—Ethnobotany. 4. Indians of South America—Peru—Religion and mythology. 5. Indians of South America—Peru—Magic. 6. Indians of South America—Peru—Enthobotany.
I. Title. II. Series.
F3430.1.A35B763 1986 299’.8 85—40401
ISBN-13 978-0-8173-5364-3 (pbk.: alk. paper)
ISBN-10 0-8173-5364-X (pbk.: alk. paper)
Portions of chapter 3 appeared in The Role of Words in Aguaruna Hunting Magic,
American Ethnologist 11:545–58, 1984. Portions of chapter 4 appeared in Aguaruna Jívaro Gardening Magic in Alto Río Mayo, Peru,
Ethnology 19:169–90, 1980. Both are excerpted with permission.
The paper on which this book is printed meets the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information Science—Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.48–1984.
ISBN-13: 978-0-8173-8264-3 (electronic)
Contents
Acknowledgments
Illustrations and Plates
Tables
Orthographic Note
Preface to the Paperback Edition
Introduction
Interpretations of Magic
The Aguaruna and Amazonian Ethnography
Studying Aguaruna Magic
Chapter 1: Alto Mayo
Alto Mayo Ethnohistory
The Alto Mayo Arguaruna, 1978
Chapter 2: Seen and Unseen
Ankuash’s Snakebite
Being and Becoming in Aguaruna Mythology
Powerful Beings
Souls
Dreams and Visions
Shamanism
Ankuash’s Snakebite Reconsidered
Chapter 3: The Uses of Affinity
Aguaruna Hunting Technology
Magical Songs
Game Grabbers
The Ethnobotany of Attraction
Hunting Failure: Causes and Cures
Chapter 4: The Garden’s Children
Aguaruna Horticulture
The Swidden as Symbolic Space
Gardening Songs
Gardening Stones
Growth-Promoting Plants
Gardening Avoidances
The Structure of Garden Magic
Manioc Horticulture as Practical Signification
Chapter 5: A Technology of Sentiment
Male-Female Relations
Songs That Direct Human Emotion
Puságki: Agents of Demented Attraction
Love Magic, Hunting Magic, and the Limits of Affinity
Chapter 6: Working Metaphors
The Question of Agency
Visionary Experience and the Direction of Events
Creating Order
Is Aguaruna Magic Performative?
Magic, Technology, and the Symbolic Power of the Ordinary
Afterword
Appendix 1: Sources of Anen
Appendix 2: Notes on the Collection, Transcription, and Translation of Aguaruna Anen
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments
My research among the Aguaruna Jívaro of the Alto Río Mayo, Peru, was supported by grants from the Henry L. and Grace Doherty Charitable Foundation, the Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research, the Centro Amazónico de Antropología y Aplicación Práctica, and Williams College. A postdoctoral fellowship at the Smithsonian Institution, under the direction of Dr. William H. Crocker, provided me with congenial surroundings in which I could finish writing this book. I thank all of these institutions for their generous assistance.
Various Peruvian friends were kind enough to welcome me into their homes during my absences from the Alto Mayo. I especially want to acknowledge the hospitality of Alejandro Camino and Patel de Camino in Lima, John Chang Luzula and Obertila Pinedo de Chang in Lamas, and Luis Uriarte and Annette Rosenvinge de Uriarte in Iquitos.
Genus and species determinations for plants collected in the Alto Mayo were made by William Anderson and Bronley Gates of the University of Michigan Herbarium and Timothy Plowman of the Field Museum of Natural History. Most of the identifications in the text, however, were based on lists of Aguaruna plant names and their Linnaean equivalents generously provided by Brent Berlin of the University of California, Berkeley. These identifications are the result of Dr. Berlin’s ethnobiological research in several Aguaruna communities on the Alto Río Marañón and its tributaries. Any inaccuracies that result from the application of his data to the flora of the Alto Río Mayo are mine alone.
Colleagues who were kind enough to comment on the manuscript at various stages of its gestation include Alton Becker, Richard I. Ford, Gillian Feeley-Harnik, Kenneth Kensinger, David Langston, Michael Taussig, Martha Works, and Aram Yengoyan. I am particularly indebted to Ivan Karp and William L. Merrill of the Smithsonian Institution for giving so freely of their critical insights during the final stages of writing.
Robert Lewis, a staff illustrator with the Smithsonian’s Department of Anthropology, prepared the figures that accompany the text.
Margaret L. Van Bolt, my compañera in the Alto Mayo, cheerfully shared the challenges of fieldwork for more than a year. Much of what I was able to learn about garden magic was the result of her rapport with the women of Huascayacu, Alto Naranjillo, and Shimpiyacu. She also contributed several of the photographs that appear in the book.
Samuel Bazán Paz, Adolfo Juép Nampín, Teodoro Timías Dosinta, Kayáp Jiukám Tsapík, Eladio Jiukám Wasúm, Vicente Weepiu Ampám, and Shajián Wajai Besént each did his best to help the visiting kurínku learn what it means to be awajún. My admiration for all the Aguaruna people of the Alto Río Mayo is, I trust, readily apparent in the pages that follow.
Illustrations and Plates
Illustrations
1. Approximate Distribution of Jivaroan Linguistic Groups
2. Department of San Martín, Peru
3. Location of Aguaruna Communities, Alto Río Mayo
4. Composition of a House Garden, Huascayacu
Plates
1. Miguel Daicháp sits with hand in front of mouth, a gesture characteristic of formal speech. (Photograph: Margaret L. Van Bolt)
2. An iwishín, or healing shaman, intoxicated by ayahuasca, looks for spirit darts in the bodies of two sick women
3. Tiwijám Jiukám sets off to hunt with his shotgun
4. Residents of Huascayacu return from a group hunting expedition into remote, virgin forest
5. Wampurái Peas plants manioc cuttings in a recently burned swidden. (Photograph: Margaret L. Van Bolt)
6. Men and women dance during a drinking party in Shimpiyacu
7. Celestina Cahuaza, a community health-care worker, administers vaccinations in Bajo Naranjillo
8. An Aguaruna schoolteacher, Adolfo Juép, studies documents that have been sent to the community by authorities in Rioja
Tables
1. Psychoactive Plants Used by the Aguaruna of the Alto Río Mayo
2. Commonly Hunted Birds and Mammals of the Alto Río Mayo, 1976–78
3. Synonyms for Common Animal Species Mentioned in Magical Hunting Songs
4. Hunting Charms of Botanical Origin
5. Principal Food Crops of the Alto Mayo Aguaruna
6. Plants Used in Manioc Planting Ritual
7. Aguaruna Symbolic Oppositions Based on Gender
8. A Sample of Cultural Elements Ordered by Powerful Beings
Orthographic Note
The Aguaruna orthography used in this book was developed by the Summer Institute of Linguistics and is now employed by the Aguaruna themselves. The pronunciation of vowels and consonants follows Spanish usage, with the following exceptions:
All accents fall on the first syllable unless otherwise noted. Nasalizations have been deleted. There are some slight phonetic differences between Aguaruna as spoken in the Alto Mayo and the Alto Marañón, but these are so minor that I have generally followed the spelling used by Mildred Larson (1966).
Preface to the Paperback Edition
When I wrote Tsewa’s Gift in the mid-1980s, I hoped my study of the Aguaruna Indians of the Peruvian rainforest would help to reframe anthropological thinking about how we should make sense of magic. I attempted to describe one people’s view of magic from the ground up and to show how magical practices are governed by deep-seated notions of causality—that is, a sense of how things happen in the world. Yet even as the work came into print, the debate about magic was ebbing, victim both of analytical exhaustion and changing intellectual fashion. Some anthropologists had come to feel that study of the rituals and myths of the world’s indigenous peoples was morally suspect, because it focused on the exotic while drawing attention away from urgent political and economic realities. No doubt the academic pendulum will eventually swing back toward concern with ritual—which is, after all, a potent vehicle for the construction of new meanings in times of trouble. For the moment, however, magic has lost some of its luster as an object of academic interest.
But books, like children, often find a place in the world that their creators never imagined. In the late 1980s, the ecological crisis of the Amazon rainforest became a matter of worldwide concern, as did the native peoples who have skillfully managed this complex ecosystem for centuries. Tsewa’s Gift has found a readership among people curious about how rainforest peoples envision the links between nature and culture. To ensure that the forest will provide the food and raw materials needed to sustain life, the Aguaruna carry on an intricate conversation with plants, animals, and spirits. Men cajole and seduce game animals to give up their lives. Women sing to the plants of the garden and comfort them with other forms of maternal tenderness. These magical
techniques are woven into the fabric of native technology in ways that challenge our own smugly compartmentalized notions of religion and technology.
Students and colleagues often ask me how the Aguaruna are weathering the difficulties through which Peru has passed during the 1980s and 1990s—difficulties that include a leftist insurgency, the explosive growth of the cocaine trade, a decline in living standards, and a cholera epidemic. When I last visited Aguaruna villages in the Alto Río Mayo in 1986, the national crisis had not dramatically affected everyday life. A year later, however, a Marxist guerrilla group called the Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Movement opened a front in the Alto Mayo valley, leading to a temporary militarization of the region. News reports from Peru suggest that the guerrilla presence has now stabilized into a low-level insurgency more akin to common banditry than to real warfare. Fortunately, the Aguaruna of the Alto Mayo have thus far been spared the atrocities visited upon Indians in other regions of the country.
The Aguaruna communities to the north of the Alto Mayo have long suffered a military presence because of their proximity to Peru’s contested border with Ecuador. Astrid Bant, a Dutch anthropologist who conducted fieldwork in Aguaruna communities in the late 1980s and early 1990s, informs me that most villages in the border region have been relatively untouched by political violence and by the cholera epidemic that has affected thousands on the Peruvian coast. The Indians’ struggle to protect their lands from colonization and harmful forms of development continues unabated, however. In 1992, the Aguaruna joined with a neighboring people, the Huambisa, to denounce the environmentally destructive activities of a Texas firm that is prospecting for oil in their territory. More significant from a long-term perspective is a decline in the productivity of Aguaruna lands as a growing population puts increased pressure on a shrinking land base.
One symptom of social malaise is the extraordinarily high rate of suicide among women and adolescents, a problem that has captured the attention of Peru’s popular press and caused great consternation among the Aguaruna themselves. The causes of suicide are complex, but they reflect in part the breakdown of traditional roles and institutions that helped people deal emotionally with family conflicts.
Although the shadow of suicide weighs heavily on community life, the Aguaruna have responded to recent challenges through social mobilization. The Aguaruna-Huambisa Council is still one of the most effective Indian organizations in Peru. In South America’s rapidly growing Indian federations, the Aguaruna play a role similar to that of the Sioux among North American Indians: they are forceful and articulate advocates for the cause of Indian rights and environmental conservation. Their prominence in debates about the future of the Amazon leads me to be optimistic about the prospects for Aguaruna cultural survival. A people so numerous, proud, and forthright are not likely to vanish anytime soon. This book is an attempt at tracing the outlines and implicit meanings of the world they are struggling to sustain.
Williamstown, Massachusetts
July 1993
Introduction
The heavy rains of Peru’s northern montaña usually keep the Aguaruna Indians indoors, where they attend to domestic chores and drink manioc beer warmed over the fire. Neighbors gather to share conversation and perhaps even to dance, provided there is enough manioc beer and a festive mood prevails.
On one rainy day, I talked with Shajián Wajai about the means by which human beings think. Do people think with their heads or their hearts?
I asked him. The verb anentáimat, to think,
is similar to the noun anentái, heart,
and some people had told me that this is because we think with our hearts. Yet it is not unusual for Aguaruna parents to exhort a child to let advice enter your head,
perhaps in recognition of the prevailing non-Indian belief about the seat of intellect. So my question to Shajián was a plea for clarification. He drank from a bowl of beer that his wife held out to him, then said deliberately, The people who say that we think with our heads are wrong because we think with our hearts. The heart is connected to the veins, which carry the thoughts in the blood through the entire body. The brain is only connected to the spinal column, isn’t it? So if we thought with our brains, we would only be able to move the thought as far as our anus!
Behind Shajián’s piquant humor lies a great concern with the nature, quality, and uses of human thought. Many of the Aguaruna childrearing practices of the past were intended to make the heart strong, the thoughts straight
or correct. One important aspect of developed thought is the ability to accomplish the practical activities by which the Aguaruna define themselves as human beings. In the course of completing these tasks, people employ many procedures that are not easily accommodated within the category technology
: they perform songs to attract game and help their gardens grow; they alter their diet so that the foods they eat will not interfere with the project at hand; they attempt to manipulate the emotions of loved ones through the power of special animal, vegetable, and mineral substances. Because the efficacy of these procedures is not explained by reference to cause and effect relationships that are acceptable in Western scientific terms, we usually classify them as magical.
Despite the fact that magic has stirred the interest of anthropologists since the birth of our discipline, the number of full-length ethnographic studies of magic is surprisingly small. Theoretical essays on magical thought draw heavily on two ethnographies—E. E. Evans-Pritchard’s Witchcraft, Oracles, and Magic Among the Azande (1937) and Bronislaw Malinowski’s Coral Gardens and Their Magic (1935)—for their inspiration. As admirable as these classic works are, they represent only a minute portion of the ethnographic record. There is still a pressing need for fine-grained accounts of magic as it is understood and practiced in specific societies.
This book examines the magical practices of the Aguaruna, a native people of the Upper Amazon. In the course of this examination, I will attempt to show how magic makes sense to the Aguaruna, given their representations of reality. As we shall see, the Aguaruna do not think of magic as an activity totally different from religion, mythology, or even instrumental action. Indeed, one of the objects of this study is to establish that from the native point of view magic does not differ qualitatively from practical activity, nor is its logic independent of prevailing notions of material causality.
At this point, the attentive reader may be asking, If magic is not clearly distinguished from other pursuits, why use the term at all?
This question admits of no easy answer. Magic
has long been viewed as a problematic label. The publication of essays that attempt to distinguish magic from religion, science, or technology is almost a cottage industry in the field of anthropology. More recently, critics have charged that magic
is a catchall for those operations which the agents consider efficacious but which the scientific observer thinks deluded
(Peel 1969:73). Jeanne Favret-Saada (1980:195) argues that this negative definition of magic is simply a sly means of defining magical practitioners as exotic others
so that the anthropologist is absolved of the need to probe deeper into truly different ways of seeing the world.
Nevertheless, magic
does serve as a convenient, if flawed, term for a congeries of phenomena that are difficult for Western observers to understand. After exploring various alternatives, including a complete purging of the term from this book, I have decided to pay reluctant homage to our intellectual history by using magic
to label the beliefs and practices I document here. A working definition that has the rare virtue of brevity is provided by J. Van Baal (1971:55–56): magic consists of ritual acts that are directed toward concrete or practical ends.
A more poetic formulation, and one I find closer to the Aguaruna way of looking at the matter, is found in Michael Taussig’s The Devil and Commodity Fetishism in South America (1980:15). Magic,
Taussig writes, takes language, symbols, and intelligibility to their outermost limits, to explore life and thereby to change its destination.
In common anthropological usage, magic
encompasses such phenomena as sorcery, shamanistic healing, the manipulation of human sentiments, and ritual procedures that accompany practical work, all of which are found in Aguaruna society. Since a detailed analysis of the Aguaruna’s entire magical repertoire would result in a text of unwieldy proportions, I have chosen to focus on magical intervention in subsistence activities and marital relations—kinds of magic that the Aguaruna practice almost exclusively in private.
Provision for private magic—that is, ritual undertaken in isolation—is rarely made in theories of ritual performance. Many anthropologists choose to focus on the effects that the ritual healers produce in their patients through the mind-body connection or placebo effect. Alternatively, they develop theories that draw attention to the social aspects of rituals—their rhetorical content and the unconscious messages they may communicate. There is no question that ritual can be an important form of social action. Nevertheless, it is illuminating to look at ritual procedures that have shed at least some of their social skin, their tissue of political and economic and interpersonal contingency. In private magic, we have the opportunity to observe collective representations being put to work by individuals for practical ends (cf. O’Keefe 1982:14).
Interpretations of Magic
Though much maligned by his intellectual descendants, Sir James Frazer is usually credited with being the first to adopt a systematic approach to the study of magic. In The Golden Bough, Frazer brings together a bewildering array of magical practices recorded all over the world and organizes them according to a limited number of themes. Frazer’s work introduces two inductive laws of magic, the Law of Similarity and the Law of Contagion, which in multiple reincarnations are still with us today in most analyses of magical acts. By thus reducing the apparent diversity of magic to a series of variations on the themes of similarity and contagion, Frazer’s intent is to demonstrate that magical thought is based on an ordered system of natural laws not unlike those of science, the difference being that the order of magic is merely an extension, by false analogy, of the order in which ideas present themselves to our minds.
Science, in contrast, rests on patient and exact observation of the phenomena themselves
(Frazer 1958 [1890]:825).
Two landmark studies of the 1930s recharted the course of ethnological approaches to magic. Evans-Pritchard’s Witchcraft, Oracles, and Magic Among the Azande (1937) argues that, first, the practitioners of magic do not necessarily confuse magical rites with practical action; second, that a system of magical beliefs may be internally coherent and logical; and third, that the people who subscribe to such beliefs are able to maintain a skeptical attitude toward their own traditions, although this skepticism is sufficiently limited that the fallacies of the system are never brought to light. Malinowski’s Coral Gardens and Their Magic (1935) asserts that the Trobriand Islanders, like the Azande, do not confuse magical action with practical, instrumental action. For Malinowski, however, magic is not an intellectual process, a means for understanding the causes of good luck or misfortune, as it is for Evans-Pritchard; rather, it is an emotional response to uncontrollable forces—disease, plant growth, the weather, and so on. The irony of Coral Gardens is that while Malinowski is committed to a psychological explanation of magic, he takes us on an engaging journey through Trobriand intellectual life as revealed in the complex tropes used in gardening spells. Over the years, Malinowski’s documentation of the intellectual aspects of magic has proved as influential as his theories of magic’s putative psychological origins.
Throughout much of the 1940s, 1950s, and 1960s, witchcraft and sorcery attracted more attention than humbler magical pursuits, and in many of these studies (e.g., Kluckhohn 1944, Marwick 1965) the principal issues are the psychological causes and social effects of magic rather than its internal logic. The question of why the members of a given society do not or cannot see the inconsistencies in