Assembling Differences

In the Peruvian Amazon’s lower Marañón basin, the prospect of an indigenous assembly appears unlikely: how can previously semi-nomadic groups, historically immersed in recurrent warfare, come together in a cohesive political entity? This transformation is undoubtedly a product of historical process...

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Main Author: Thomas Mouriès
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Bern Open Publishing 2024-11-01
Series:Swiss Journal of Sociocultural Anthropology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal-sa.ch/article/view/9760
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author Thomas Mouriès
author_facet Thomas Mouriès
author_sort Thomas Mouriès
collection DOAJ
description In the Peruvian Amazon’s lower Marañón basin, the prospect of an indigenous assembly appears unlikely: how can previously semi-nomadic groups, historically immersed in recurrent warfare, come together in a cohesive political entity? This transformation is undoubtedly a product of historical processes, greatly influenced by Western political structures and legal frameworks. However, does this shift erase the traditional conflicts among Amazonian groups? The criteria defining indigenous identity and collective action still bear traces of past hostilities, albeit reshaped by indigenous political dynamics. This article draws from the ethnography of a federation assembly to delve into the nuances between fragmentation and unity. Through the lens of assembly issues, it seeks to uncover both the ruptures and continuities defining contemporary indigenous communities.
format Article
id doaj-art-f38e83f669a14a50b60ba30069f5c2f6
institution Kabale University
issn 2813-5229
2813-5237
language deu
publishDate 2024-11-01
publisher Bern Open Publishing
record_format Article
series Swiss Journal of Sociocultural Anthropology
spelling doaj-art-f38e83f669a14a50b60ba30069f5c2f62024-11-18T03:16:00ZdeuBern Open PublishingSwiss Journal of Sociocultural Anthropology2813-52292813-52372024-11-0130110.36950/sjsca.2024.30.9760Assembling DifferencesThomas Mouriès0Laboratoire d'anthropologie sociale (CNRS, EHESS, Collège de France) In the Peruvian Amazon’s lower Marañón basin, the prospect of an indigenous assembly appears unlikely: how can previously semi-nomadic groups, historically immersed in recurrent warfare, come together in a cohesive political entity? This transformation is undoubtedly a product of historical processes, greatly influenced by Western political structures and legal frameworks. However, does this shift erase the traditional conflicts among Amazonian groups? The criteria defining indigenous identity and collective action still bear traces of past hostilities, albeit reshaped by indigenous political dynamics. This article draws from the ethnography of a federation assembly to delve into the nuances between fragmentation and unity. Through the lens of assembly issues, it seeks to uncover both the ruptures and continuities defining contemporary indigenous communities. https://journal-sa.ch/article/view/9760indigenous assembliesethnogenesispolitical representationindigenous politicspolitical autonomy
spellingShingle Thomas Mouriès
Assembling Differences
Swiss Journal of Sociocultural Anthropology
indigenous assemblies
ethnogenesis
political representation
indigenous politics
political autonomy
title Assembling Differences
title_full Assembling Differences
title_fullStr Assembling Differences
title_full_unstemmed Assembling Differences
title_short Assembling Differences
title_sort assembling differences
topic indigenous assemblies
ethnogenesis
political representation
indigenous politics
political autonomy
url https://journal-sa.ch/article/view/9760
work_keys_str_mv AT thomasmouries assemblingdifferences