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UID:811a566ee9e1f2072b66ab89d63076ca
CATEGORIES:Séminaire de l'EREA
CREATED:20260521T114105
SUMMARY:Indigenous Alliance Making: Histories of Agency in Colonial Lowland South America with a focus on Makushi alliance in Guyana (James Andrew Whitaker, University of Southern Mississippi)
LOCATION:Lesc – salle 308F (3e étage) - 21\, allée de l’Université\, Nanterre\, \, 9
 2000\, France
DESCRIPTION:Since the colonial era, Indigenous people in lowland South America have for
 med alliances and partnerships with outsiders within an array of different 
 circumstances that range from trade and other forms of economic exchange to
  missionization, warfare and predation. Drawing on historical encounters fr
 om Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, and Guyana, Indigenous Alliance Making: Histo
 ries of Agency in Colonial Lowland South America (https://uapress.arizona.e
 du/book/indigenous-alliance-making) (Whitaker &amp; Harris ed., 2025) exami
 nes such cases across the continent. It contributes to a growing historiogr
 aphical emphasis on Indigenous strategic relations with outsiders and highl
 ights how Indigenous people have sought to steer or even control the conten
 t and direction of these relations despite adverse circumstances. This pres
 entation will provide an overview of the book with a particular focus on th
 e final chapter, “Makushi Alliances in Guyana: Partnerships against Predati
 on.” It will focus on how Makushi people strived for mutualistic relations 
 under circumstances variously characterized by symmetrical and asymmetrical
  dynamics. It will also explore how such ethnohistories can contribute to c
 ontemporary ethnographic research with Indigenous groups in Amazonia.\nLa p
 résentation sera réalisée en anglais.\n
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<p><img src="https://www.lesc-cnrs.fr/images/vhirtzel/Séminaire_Erea/Sémina
 ire_Whitaker.jpg" width="300" height="460" alt="Séminaire Whitaker" style="
 margin-right: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px; float: left;" />Since the colonial
  era, Indigenous people in lowland South America have formed alliances and 
 partnerships with outsiders within an array of different circumstances that
  range from trade and other forms of economic exchange to missionization, w
 arfare and predation. Drawing on historical encounters from Bolivia, Brazil
 , Colombia, and Guyana, <em><a href="https://uapress.arizona.edu/book/indig
 enous-alliance-making">Indigenous Alliance Making: Histories of Agency in C
 olonial Lowland South America</a> </em>(Whitaker &amp; Harris ed., 2025) ex
 amines such cases across the continent. It contributes to a growing histori
 ographical emphasis on Indigenous strategic relations with outsiders and hi
 ghlights how Indigenous people have sought to steer or even control the con
 tent and direction of these relations despite adverse circumstances. This p
 resentation will provide an overview of the book with a particular focus on
  the final chapter, “Makushi Alliances in Guyana: Partnerships against Pred
 ation.” It will focus on how Makushi people strived for mutualistic relatio
 ns under circumstances variously characterized by symmetrical and asymmetri
 cal dynamics. It will also explore how such ethnohistories can contribute t
 o contemporary ethnographic research with Indigenous groups in Amazonia.</p
 ><p>La présentation sera réalisée en anglais.</p>
DTSTAMP:20260531T074848
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260612T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260612T173000
SEQUENCE:0
TRANSP:OPAQUE
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