ABSTRACT

This fascinating book, translated from the French, explores the Yafar society, a forest people living by shifting cultivation, hunting and gathering. Based on fifteen years of research, it offers a detailed examination of all aspects of a society whose material and nutritional relations with their rainforest environment are mediated by a sociocultural system based on a carefully negotiated relationship with natural forces, and harmony between the sexes. The author shows how these basic ideas can be found in the ritualized and institutional aspects of the Yafar's social life, as well as their mythology. Rich in detail and insight, this book fully documents the Yafar's complex ritual involving a symbolic exchange with the spirit world, a secret cult, and curing rites presided over by hereditary religious officials. The author's analysis of Yafar ideologies reveals that sexual reproduction is the key to their society and the model for continuity and regeneration prescribed by nature.

part I|104 pages

Social Groups: Structures, Dynamics and Representations

chapter 1|33 pages

Society and Local Groups

chapter 2|35 pages

Dual Organization

chapter 3|19 pages

From Dualism to Patrilineal Units

chapter 4|13 pages

Household and Family

part II|129 pages

Social Relations and Symbolic Function in Yafar Social Economy

chapter 5|30 pages

Territory and Land

chapter 6|26 pages

Horticulture-Arboriculture

chapter 7|56 pages

Foraging and Husbandry

part III|271 pages

Sexuality, Symbolic Reproduction and Social Continuity

chapter 9|50 pages

Sexuality, Procreation and Powers

chapter 11|28 pages

Kinship and its Representations

chapter 12|58 pages

Individual Identity and Social Ontogeny

chapter 13|38 pages

Hidden Powers

chapter 14|46 pages

Bad Magic, Bow or Fighting Stick

part IV|44 pages

Fracture and Change

chapter |6 pages

Conclusion