“The sorcerer is not human”: considerations on sorcery and kinship for rethink the xinguano multiethnic system

  • Marina Vanzolini Museu Nacional, UFRJ
Keywords: Upper Xingu, Aweti, Sorcery, Shamanism, Amerindian Politics

Abstract

The article analyzes the sociopolitical dynamics of the xinguano multiethnic system, located in central-west Brazil, drawing from the logics revealed by sorcery practices. Based on fieldwork with the Aweti, a Tupi xinguano group, the analysis of this logic enables a description of the xinguano sociocultural unity and of the groups that constitute it not only as historical products —something that has already been shown by the region’s ethnology— but also as continuously historical products, always to be recreated. The article’s key argument is that sorcery is the dark side, the unwanted effect of the process of becoming kin, a process central to the constitution of xinguano identity. Thus, sorcery would be what makes the xinguano people never seem perfectly xinguanos/humans to themselves.

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Author Biography

Marina Vanzolini, Museu Nacional, UFRJ
Pos-doctoranda en el PPGAS/Museu Nacional, UFRJ.
Published
2013-07-30
How to Cite
Vanzolini, M. (2013). “The sorcerer is not human”: considerations on sorcery and kinship for rethink the xinguano multiethnic system. RUNA, Archivo Para Las Ciencias Del Hombre, 34(2), 215-232. https://doi.org/10.34096/runa.v34i2.644
Section
Open Space - Original Articles