ANTHROPOLOGY 251
PEOPLES OF SOUTH AMERICA
Fall, 2003
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Dr. Jane Granskog |
Office Hours: |
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Sociology/Anthropology Dept:
664-2368 |
Tu Th: 1:30-3:00 |
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Office: DDH/CC206 664-3117 |
W: 3:00-5:00 |
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e-mail:
jgranskog@csub.edu website:
www.csub.edu/~jgranskog |
Or by appointment |
Course Objectives and Description
The primary objectives of this course are: (1) to survey the range and diversity
of Indian societies in South America from a socio-historical and ecological
perspective; and (2) to obtain a more meaningful understanding of the diversity
of South American Indian societies and the problems faced by contemporary
Indian groups undergoing socio-cultural change.
These objectives will
be carried out through the exploration of five themes:
1) Forms of ecological adaptation
2) Ethnic and racial diversity
3) Marriage and family life
4) Ideology and ritual expression
5) Problems of modernization
Required Readings
Bastien, Joseph,
1985. Mountain of the Condor.
Waveland Press.
Heyck, Denis,
2002. Surviving Globalization
in Three Latin American Communities. Broadview Press.
Perkins, John, Shakim
Mariano Chumpi, 2001. Spirit of
the Shuar: Wisdom from the Last Unconquered People of the Amazon. Inner
Traditions.
Wilson, David,
1999. Indigenous South
Americans of the Past and Present.
Westview Press
Readings on Reserve
Annis, Sheldon and
Peter Hakim (eds), 1988. Direct
to the Poor: Grassroots Development
in Latin America. Lynne Rienner. Ch. 1, 8, 11, 15
Gray, Andrew, 1987. The Amerindians of South America.
Minority Rights Groups No. 15
From Langdon, E Jean Matteson and Gerhard Baer (Eds),
1992. Portals of Power:
Shamanism in South America Albuquerque:
University of New Mexico Press.
Langdon, E Jean Matteson, 1992. Shamanism and Anthropology. In Langdon and Baer, pp. 1-24.
Langdon, E Jean Matteson, 1992. Dau: Shamanic Power in Siona Religion and Medicine. In Langdon and Baer, pp. 41-62.
Perrin, Michel, 1992. The Body of the Guajiro Shaman: Symptoms or Symbols? In Langdon and Baer, pp. 103-126.
From:
Lyon, Patricia (Ed), 1974. Native
South Americans: Ethnology of the
Least Known Continent. Boston: Little, Brown Publishing Co.
Murphy, Robert, 1974. Deviance and Social Control I: What Makes Waru Run? In Lyon, pp.
195-201; Deviance and Social Control II:
Borai. In Lyon, pp.
202-208.
Spitzer, M., 1978. Faces of Change. Boston: American University Field Staff Inc., Wheelock Educational
Resources. Chapters on Bolivia,
#1-6 (background reading for the films on the Aymara).
Stiles, D., 1987. "Classical versus Grassroots
Development". Cultural
Survival Quarterly 11(1): 3-7.
Sample papers from students who have taken this class
in the past will also be placed on reserve. Additional required and recommended readings not listed
above may also be put on reserve during the quarter.
Course Requirements
Each of you will select a particular contemporary
indigenous society (by the second week of class) about which readings and
research focusing on the five themes will be carried out. A bibliography of sample societies will
be provided. Additional resources
can be found on the internet at http://ehraf.hti.umich.edu/e/ehraf. Following introductory lectures on each
theme, class sessions will focus on discussion of relevant concepts as they
apply to the material you have gathered on your chosen society. In addition, you will be asked to
compare and contrast your findings with correspondent features of American
culture. Three short written
reports (see below) on three of the themes will be required based on the
application of the concepts and theories to the society being researched. You will also be asked to give a short
presentation on the society you have chosen during class discussion. In addition, there will be a final
examination consisting primarily of short essay questions. The three reports (revised if
necessary) along with a final summation of your selected society will be turned
in at the end of the term.
The percentage breakdown of course requirements will
be as follows:
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Research reports (20% each): |
60% |
Final summary report & class
presentations/discussion: |
10% |
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Final Exam: |
30% |
Policy on Plagiarism
The Department of Sociology and Anthropology will not
accept or tolerate instances of academic fraud or plagiarism among its students
or faculty. Plagiarism is an
extremely serious offense. Using
published or unpublished material without citing the source is plagiarism. You may use someone else's material if
you enclose it in quotation marks and reference precisely its source. Such material, however, should be used
sparingly, if at all. Simply
paraphrasing someone else's material by minimal re-arrangement of the wording
is also plagiarism. It is an
equally serious offense if you write a paper for someone else, or copy someone
else's work, or allow someone to copy your work. In all cases, this is cheating. Plagiarism and cheating automatically result in a grade of F
for the course and students will face disciplinary sanction by Student
Discipline and Judicial Affairs.
College regulations also require that a letter be entered into the
student's file regarding the infraction, and any second offense will lead to
permanent dismissal from the university.
More specifics can be found at:
Plagiarism
Guidelines for Research Reports
The three short research reports on your selected
society must be typed, double-spaced and a minimum of 4-6 typed pages in
length. Each one is due at the end
of the 4th, 6th, and 8th week respectively. Each paper will focus on one of the following themes and
will be written in the following order:
(1) marriage and family life -- social organization; (2) ideology and
ritual expression; (3) modernization.
Each paper will be evaluated and returned to you for possible
revisions. After you have taken
the instructor's comments into account, all three papers with a corresponding
summary will be re-submitted as a single document at the end of the quarter.
The following criteria
will be used to evaluate your reports:
1) Thoroughness in gathering all relevant
empirical material on the themes.
2) Analysis and interpretation: relating empirical material to
explanatory frameworks (theories, concepts, and generalizations) and
demonstration of the discovery of relationships among diverse aspects of
culture. Does the report provide new
insight into the chosen subject matter via carefully thought out consideration
or does it come off as a simple "re-hash" of source materials?
3) Evidence of comparisons with materials
from other cultures, either your own and/or other South American cultures
discussed in class and in the readings.
4) Clarity of structure and organization. Is
the report clear, concise and to the point? Is the information presented in a logical, orderly fashion
that can be readily understood?
5) Correct spelling, punctuation and
grammar.
Research Report
Questions and Format
1. RESEARCH REPORT I - The focus of your first report is on the forms of
social organization (marriage and family in particular) found within your
selected society. More
specifically, your report should address the following:
How have geography, history and the
corresponding adaptation to the environment affected the forms of social
organization found within your society?
What types of organizational units are present (family and kin groups in
particular)? What types of
relations do people form with one another? Include your reaction to their ways as contrasted with your
own. Be sure to specify the
"ethnographic present" (time period you are describing) being
utilized.
REFERENCES - We do not use footnotes
but include references in the text and list them in a bibliography at the end
of the report. Guidelines for the
appropriate style to be used can be found on the web at http://www.aaanet.org/pubs/style_guide.htm An alphabetical list of ALL
references utilized MUST be included in the bibliography. If you get a fact from a book, you must
list the author, date, and page in the text of your paper. For example, if you are describing
specific features of the status of females in Yanomamo society in your paper as
discussed by Chagnon, then you must credit Chagnon.
Women in Yanomamo society are clearly
inferior to men -- they are responsible for carrying out the most arduous
menial tasks and have no significant decision making powers (Chagnon 1997:122).
If you are citing the same reference
consecutively (i.e., two or more times in a row) for the second and consecutive
citations use the following format:
Yanomamo women do not have any say in
determining whom they shall marry (pp. 122-123)
Direct quotes that are less than two
to three lines may be incorporated in the text and indicated as such by
quotation marks at the beginning and end of the quote. Quotes more than four lines in length
should be separated from the body of the text, single spaced and indented
five spaces on either side; such longer quotes do NOT need quotation marks.
At the end of your paper you then must
list the Chagnon reference. FOLLOW
THIS FORMAT, NOTE THE POSITIONING OF THE AUTHOR, DATE, CITY OF PUBLICATION AND
PUBLISHER.
A BOOK REFERENCE WOULD
LOOK LIKE THIS:
Chagnon, Napolean
1997 Yanomamo.
Fort Worth,TX: Harcourt
Brace College Publishers.
A JOURNAL ARTICLE WOULD
LOOK LIKE THIS:
Chagnon, Napolean
1967 Yanomamo--The Fierce People. Natural History 76:22-31.
NOTE THE NAME OF THE
JOURNAL, VOLUME, NUMBER, AND PAGES
AN INTERNET SOURCE
WOULD LOOK LIKE THIS:
Flores, Robert
1998
Report from Chiapas.
Electronic document URL http://www.inmotionmagazine.com/chpintro.html (visited 2003, September 15)
2. RESEARCH REPORT II - The focus of this report is on the characteristics
of the belief system (ideology) and the way in which it is expressed,
especially in ritual activity. The
format for this essay is the same as before. Be sure to address the following question in your essay:
Briefly describe the MAJOR features of
the ideology (world view/belief system) of your society. How does ritual and religious ideology
contribute to a more meaningful social life for the members of your group? Include your reaction to their ways as
contrasted with your own.
One way to deal with the problem of
describing an ideology in succinct fashion is to look for key values (core
values) expressed within the society -- e.g., the emphasis on male superiority
and aggressiveness found among the Yanomamo; the ritual significance of the
coca plant for the Aymara, etc.
Show how these values are expressed in ritual activity using supportive
examples to illustrate them.
3. RESEARCH REPORT III - The focus of this report is on the impact of the
outside world upon your chosen society.
The format, once again, is the same as in preceding reports. Be sure to address the following
questions in your essay:
Briefly describe the nature of the
interaction your society has had with the outside world (you may use an
historical overview, touching upon key points of interaction/events, to do
this). What problems have they
faced in coping with outsiders and how have they done so? What do you think is the potential
future of your group from the evidence available to you? To what extent do you feel that they
have a role to play in deciding their own future? Include, as before, in your summary conclusions, your
reaction to the information you have uncovered.
4. FINAL RESEARCH REPORT SUMMARY - In this final report summary, to be included with
the re-submittal of your three research reports, address the following
questions:
In the overall investigation of your
society, what aspects of their life/culture have you found to be the most
significant? What new insights
into the workings of other cultures have you gained from doing this study? What new insights have you gained on
American culture and society as a result of your investigations?
SCHEDULE OF
READING ASSIGNMENTS
Date and Topic
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Readings |
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Week 1:
(9/9, 11) Overview - An
Introduction to South America (geography and history) |
Wilson: Ch. 1-4 (pp.
1-108) Gray (recommended) |
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Week 2 & 3:
(9/16, 18, 23, 25) Culture and Environment -
Variation in Forms of Adaptation |
Wilson: Ch 5,6,8 (pp.
109-250; 286-333) Bastian, 1-50; |
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Preliminary Selection
of Society Due: Sept. 23 |
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Week 4 & 5:
(9/30, 10/2, 7, 9) Variations in Social
Structure and Organization (marriage and family life) Films on Yanomamo, slides on Shuar |
Perkins and Chumpi; Murphy, pp. 195-208 |
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Research Report I
Due: October 7 |
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Week 6 & 7:
(10/14, 16, 21, 23) Ideology: Relations with the Supernatural Films:
Aymara: Magic and Catholicism; The Spirit Possession of Alejandro
Mamami; also on the Campi and Kayapo |
Perkins and Chumpi Bastien, pp. 51-199;
Langdon; Faces of Change:
Bolivia #5,6 |
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Research Report II
Due: October 23 |
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Week 8 & 9:
(10/28,30, 11/4, 6) Change and
Destruction: Processes of
Modernization |
Heyck pp. 1-200; Stiles; Annis & Hakim, pp.
1-16; Ch. 8, 11, 15 |
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Research Report III
Due: November 6 HOLIDAY November 11
Veteranšs Day |
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Week 9 & 10:
(11/6, 13, 18) Summary and Conclusions -- The Future of the
Amerindians and Our Own Responses to Global Crises Films:
Amazonia; Americas: Brazil, Chile |
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Final Summary Report
Due: November 18 |
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Final Exam: Tuesday, November 25 - 5:00 - 7:30 |
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