Non-Fiction Books:

Trekking Through History

The Huaorani of Amazonian Ecuador
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Paperback / softback
$152.00
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Description

The Huaorani of Ecuador lived as hunters and gatherers in the Amazonian rainforest for hundred of years, largely undisturbed by western civilization. Since their first encounter with North American missionaries in 1956, they have held a special place in journalistic and popular imagination as "Ecuador's last savages." Trekking Through History is the first description of Huaorani society and culture according to modern standards of ethnographic writing. Through her comprehensive study of their extraordinary tradition of trekking, Laura Rival shows that the Huaorani cannot be seen merely as anachronistic survivors of the Spanish Conquest. Her critical reappraisal of the notions of agricultural regression and cultural devolution challenges the universal application of the thesis that marginal tribes of the Amazon Basin represent devolved populations who have lost their knowledge of agriculture. Far from being an evolutionary event, trekking expresses cultural creativity and political agency.Through her detailed comparative discussion of native Amazonian representations of history and the environment, Rival illustrates the unique way the Huaorani have socialized nature by choosing to depend on resources created in the past -- highlighting the unique contribution anthropology makes to the study of environmental history.

Author Biography:

Laura Rival is lecturer in anthropology and development at Oxford University. She has written several ethnographic articles and papers on the Huaorani Indians, and contributed to several books. She is the editor of The Social Life of Trees: Anthropological Perspectives on Tree Symbolism.
Release date NZ
June 1st, 2002
Author
Audience
  • Professional & Vocational
Illustrations
<B>Color Illus.: </B>12,
Pages
256
Dimensions
152x229x15
ISBN-13
9780231118453
Product ID
2405392

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