Title: Ladakh, India
1Ladakh, India
2Kabul, Afghanistan
3Chaco, Paraguay
4Los Angeles, USA
5Credits
- All photographs by Paul McCurry
6Ecosystems
7Key terms and concepts
- Acculturation
- Horticulture
- Patrilineal
- Moeity
- Household
- Spheres of exchange
- Slash and burn (swidden) agriculture
- Clan
- Polygany
8Horticulturalist Adaptation
- Yanomamo
- Tropical Rainforest Environments
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10- Among the last indigenous peoples of Amazonia to
be contacted by outside world. - The term applied by Chagnonunacculturated
implies they have not been incorporated into the
wider Hispanic culture of Brazil or Venezuela.
11- Horticultural adaptation involves limited
agricultural production at household scale. - Food resources are for family or village
sustenance. - Supplemented by ongoing hunting and foraging.
12Leisure time is afforded by successful harvests.
13- Irregular contact with conquistadors, explorers,
and missionaries. - Fiercely independent and territorial.
- Village life,(shabono) centered on limited
farming. - Male roles include that of warrior as well as
farmer. - Characteristically highly distrustful of
strangers.
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15In addition to contact with loggers, miners and
government representatives, Yanomamo also have
contact with missionaries, and international
support groups.
16One arrangement of many village types.
17Villages influenced by government, and
missionaries. Non-traditional architecture.
18Horticulture
- Limited scale farming
- Seasonal
- Generally for family or village consumption only.
- Semi-sedentary and seasonally sedentary, but also
some examples of permanent villages in especially
productive areas.
19Marriage and kinship Bilateral cross cousin
marriage. Village endogamy. Polyggyny Patrilineal
Marriage from specified lineages.
20Internal sources of conflict
- Feuds based on land use
- Diminishing meat sources
- Marriage rules and sex ratio imbalance (practice
of female infanticide is a contributing cause) - Evil spirits and sorcery
- Raids between villages often lead to open
warfare.
21External pressure for acculturation
- Advanced technology
- Roads built by companies altered settlement
patterns, led to begging and limited seasonal
employment. - Two variants of Yanomamo society began to emerge.
- Pharmaceutical companies seek new drugs in the
rainforest among tribes.
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23Environmental problems
- Mining operations have poisoned the water
sources. - Logging has decimated the limited wild game.
- Lack of immunity to diseases led to 20 of
population dying from epidemic. - Yanomamo over hunting also depletes protein
sources.
24Strange bedfellows
- The rush to protect Yanomamo came from
environmental groups, who gained greater
attention than rights activists. - New question arises, Should Yanomamo be allowed
to remain a they are? Is this not just another
form of neglect?
25Protest over illegal mining.
26Land rights issue
- Yanomamo plight brought the political issue of
indigenous rights to the public. - In short, What rights do a indigenous people have
relative to the dominant socio-political body?
27Alliances
- Environmental groups and human rights activists
sought autonomy for Yanomamo. - The alliance is based in part on recognizing the
Yanomamo as significant players in the natural
ecosystem.
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