PAGANS INTO CHRISTIANS: THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OR RELIGIOUS CONVERSION AMONG THE HARAKMBUT OF LOWLAND SOUTHEASTERN PERU, 1902-1982.

Item

Title
PAGANS INTO CHRISTIANS: THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OR RELIGIOUS CONVERSION AMONG THE HARAKMBUT OF LOWLAND SOUTHEASTERN PERU, 1902-1982.
Identifier
AAI8801773
identifier
8801773
Creator
WAHL, LISSIE.
Contributor
Eric R. Wolf
Date
1987
Language
English
Publisher
City University of New York.
Subject
Anthropology, Cultural
Abstract
This study addresses the development of Dominican missions among the Harakmbut of lowland southeastern Peru in the course of the twentieth century. The part played by political economic processes in the relationship established between missionaries and natives is emphasized.;Field research was carried out in the mission site of Shintuya through participant-observation, in-depth interviews, and questionnaires, although three additional Harakmbut villages were visited. Historical research was conducted in Lima and Cusco, while supplementary information was gathered in Sicuani, Puno, Santa Rosa de Ocopa, Yarinacocha, Paucartambo, Arequipa, and in La Paz, Bolivia.;Missions are primarily found to have a social impact upon the means and terms through which natives confront both their social conditions of existence and incorporation into a wider polity, in this case, the Peruvian nation-state. The impact of the practical ideologies espoused by the Dominicans is thus found to be shaped by the response to the new social order being posited simultaneously. Of key significance in this regard is the reciprocal action of native and missionary strategies of social reproduction under varying political economic contexts.
Type
dissertation
Source
PQT Legacy CUNY.xlsx
degree
Ph.D.
Program
Anthropology
Item sets
CUNY Legacy ETDs