With or without ancestors? Validity of the ancestral in the Peruvian Amazon

Authors

  • Thomas Mouriès Escuela de Altos Estudios en Ciencias Sociales
    Es licenciado en Filosofía y máster en Relaciones Internacionales y en Antropología. Tiene experiencia profesional en ONG (manejo de programas de investigación/acción, gobernanza y asuntos latinoamericanos) y formación intercultural. Actualmente termina un doctorado en Antropología Social en la Escuela de Altos Estudios en Ciencias Sociales (EHESS, París, Francia) sobre las nuevas formas de liderazgo indígena amazónico y sus implicancias para la redefinición de los campos de la indigenidad y de la política en el Perú. Entre sus publicacionesse cuentan ‘Accords de libre-échange: menaces sur l’Amazonie’, en Alternatives Internationales 42, marzo 2009, y ‘La diversidad de las fuentes de legitimidad del poder en la región andino-amazónica’, en Thomas Mouriès (ed.), La legitimidad del poder en los países andino-amazónicos: Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador y Perú,París, IRG, 2011, pp. 19-28. Correo electrónico: thomas.mouries@gmail.com

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18800/anthropologica.201401.004

Keywords:

Amazon rainforest, ancestrality, awajún, ayahuasca, Convention 169, Inter-American Court of Human Rights, indigenous cosmologies, indigenous rights, political discourse, state, jurisprudence, leadership, political ontology, Peru, indigenous politics, territory

Abstract

The existence —or not— of the concept of ancestors in the indigenous Amazon has been the subject of much debate. However, regional leaders do not hesitate to call upon ‘ancestral’ knowledge, customs, or territories in the sense that, from an academic point of view, could appear enigmatic. «Ancestral, but… with or without ancestors?» is the question a confused anthropologist might ask. In this article, I propose to offer elements of a response to this question,based on a case study in Peru. First I analyze how Amazonian indigenous leaders, following international law, have adopted the legal notion of ‘ancestral possession’ of their territory to adapt it to the political sphere. This approach accounts for the recent generalization and uniformization of the term ‘ancestral’, but poses the problem of how it articulates with the indigenous cosmologies that it supposes to reflect. For this reason, I explore in the second section the pertinence of the category of ‘ancestor’ in the indigenous Amazon, briefly drawing upon the academic debate in order to define inwhat way this category takes on meaning. Based on testimony from an experienced Awajún leader, we thus return in the third section more explicitly to the different meanings and planes of reference that unfold when one uses the term ‘ancestral’, showing how Amazonian indigenous people not only adopt external conceptual elements and arguments, but also transform them based on their own cosmological singularities and political perspectives.

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Published

2014-07-17

How to Cite

Mouriès, T. (2014). With or without ancestors? Validity of the ancestral in the Peruvian Amazon. Anthropologica Del Departamento De Ciencias Sociales, 32(32), 17–40. https://doi.org/10.18800/anthropologica.201401.004

Issue

Section

Contemporary political anthropology in the Western Amazon