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Texas Pan American Ser.: Under the Rainbow : Nature and Supernature among the Panare Indians by Jean-Paul Dumont (1976, Trade Paperback)

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Product Identifiers

PublisherUniversity of Texas Press
ISBN-100292740816
ISBN-139780292740815
eBay Product ID (ePID)116879709

Product Key Features

Number of Pages192 Pages
Publication NameUnder the Rainbow : Nature and Supernature Among the Panare Indians
LanguageEnglish
SubjectIndigenous Studies, Anthropology / Cultural & Social
Publication Year1976
TypeTextbook
AuthorJean-Paul Dumont
Subject AreaSocial Science
SeriesTexas Pan American Ser.
FormatTrade Paperback

Dimensions

Item Height0.6 in
Item Weight16 Oz
Item Length9 in
Item Width6 in

Additional Product Features

Intended AudienceScholarly & Professional
IllustratedYes
Table Of ContentAcknowledgments 1. Introduction 2. The Geographical Frame 3. The Historical Frame 4. An Ethnographic Presentation 5. Inhabited Space 6. Time and Astrosexuality 7. Hearing and Taste 8. Conclusions Bibliography Index
SynopsisThis ethnographic study of the Panare Indians of Venezuela is the first extensive look at a tribe of this region of the Amazonia. It is an important book not only because it delves into the myth-filled Panare culture, but also because the author has used a modified version of the structural analysis of Claude Levi-Strauss in examining the Panare. Levi-Strauss applied his method of structural analysis to the mythology of many societies in Amazonia, but never to any single society. Jean-Paul Dumont has filled that gap and has shown how the approach works in practice when applied to the intensive study of a single, small-scale culture. His book significantly expands the discussion of the strengths and weaknesses of the method. The work deals specifically with the implicit mythology of the Panare and is concerned with the symbolic activities manifested in the daily behavior of this group. The analysis of the symbolism, explains Dumont, allows for the discovery of the conceptual system through which the Panare conceive of themselves. The study is organized into two parts: a presentation of the data and an analysis. The presentation includes a geographical and historical account of the Panare and a general ethnological profile. The analysis is organized into the conceptual categories of inhabited space, time, astrosexuality, hearing, and taste. A concluding chapter summarizes the analysis. Under the Rainbow will be of interest and of value not only to anthropologists but also to linguists, philosophers, psychologists, and others interested in the general intellectual movement represented by French structuralism. The fieldwork for Under the Rainbow was conducted in Venezuelan Guiana from September 1967 to July 1969., This ethnographic study of the Panare Indians of Venezuela is the first extensive look at a tribe of this region of the Amazonia. It is an important book not only because it delves into the myth-filled Panare culture, but also because the author has used a modified version of the structural analysis of Claude Lévi-Strauss in examining the Panare. Lévi-Strauss applied his method of structural analysis to the mythology of many societies in Amazonia, but never to any single society. Jean-Paul Dumont has filled that gap and has shown how the approach works in practice when applied to the intensive study of a single, small-scale culture. His book significantly expands the discussion of the strengths and weaknesses of the method. The work deals specifically with the implicit mythology of the Panare and is concerned with the symbolic activities manifested in the daily behavior of this group. The analysis of the symbolism, explains Dumont, allows for the discovery of the conceptual system through which the Panare conceive of themselves. The study is organized into two parts: a presentation of the data and an analysis. The presentation includes a geographical and historical account of the Panare and a general ethnological profile. The analysis is organized into the conceptual categories of inhabited space, time, astrosexuality, hearing, and taste. A concluding chapter summarizes the analysis. Under the Rainbow will be of interest and of value not only to anthropologists but also to linguists, philosophers, psychologists, and others interested in the general intellectual movement represented by French structuralism. The fieldwork for Under the Rainbow was conducted in Venezuelan Guiana from September 1967 to July 1969., This ethnographic study of the Panare Indians of Venezuela is the first extensive look at a tribe of this region of the Amazonia.