PERSONHOOD AND “FRONTIER” IN CONTEMPORARY AMAZONIA AND SIBERIA Cover Image

PERSONHOOD AND “FRONTIER” IN CONTEMPORARY AMAZONIA AND SIBERIA
PERSONHOOD AND “FRONTIER” IN CONTEMPORARY AMAZONIA AND SIBERIA

Author(s): Marc Brightman, Vanessa Elisa Grotti, Olga Ulturgasheva
Subject(s): Energy and Environmental Studies, Human Geography, Regional Geography, Environmental Geography, Cultural Anthropology / Ethnology, Environmental interactions, Sociology of Religion, Ontology
Published by: Центр независимых социологических исследований (ЦНСИ)
Keywords: Amazonia; Siberia; resource frontiers; extractivism; personhood; shamanism;

Summary/Abstract: The adage that anthropology is comparative if it can be defined as anything at all has been tested in recent years to great effect—particularly on the theme of the body (Gregor and Tuzin 2001; Lambek and Strathern 1998)—and with greater confidence than it had been a decade previously (Holy 1987). The body has provided a useful starting point for cross-cultural comparison because, at some level, the physically existing, universal human body can be considered a common factor among all cultures. While the apparent universality and constancy of the body may be questioned in light of ethnographic evidence, and while the body can be politicized in differing ways, when politics and history themselves are taken as points of comparison, a new and somewhat different challenge is set. Taking up both challenges and placing them alongside each other, this paper explores comparatively the themes of “frontier” and “personhood” in two regions, Amazonia and Siberia.

  • Issue Year: 2/2010
  • Issue No: 2
  • Page Range: 348-365
  • Page Count: 18
  • Language: English