• Media type: E-Book
  • Title: Jivaro : SD09
  • Contains: Jivaro - Anonymous and John Beierle (synopsis and indexing notes) - 2006 -- - The head-hunters of Western Amazonas: the life and culture of the Jibaro Indians of eastern Ecuador and Peru - by Rafael Karsten - 1935 -- - Historical and ethnographical material on the Jivaro Indians - Matthew Williams Stirling - 1938 -- - Notes on the Jivaros and Canelos Indians - Alfred Simson - 1880 -- - Head hunters of the Amazon: seven years of exploration and adventure - by F.W. Up de Graff, with a foreword by Kermit Roosevelt ... - 1923 -- - Contribution to the study of the Jivaro or Suor language - Bertrand Flornoy - 1938 -- - Indian tribes of eastern Peru - by William Curtis Farabee ; introduction by Louis John de Milhau ; twenty-eight plates and twenty illustrations in the text - 1922 -- - The headshrinkers of Ecuador - Herbert Spencer Dickey - 1936 --^
    geographic, historical and ethnographic research - Paul Rivet - 1907 -- - The Jivaro Indians: geographic, historical and ethnographic research - Paul Rivet - 1908 -- - The Jibaro anthropometry - Harry Meyers - 1937 -- - Jivaro dance regalia - William C. Orchard - 1925 -- - A journey on the Rio Zamora, Ecuador - J. L. Hermessen - 1917 -- - The Jivaro - Alfred Métraux - 1948 -- - On the trail of the unknown in the wilds of Ecuador and the Amazon - George Miller Dyott - [1926] -- - A frequent variation of the maxillary central incisors, with some observations on dental caries among the Jivaro (Shuara) Indians of Ecuador - Harry Bernard Wright - 1942 -- - Travelling in the Aguaruna Region - Hans H. Brüning - 1928 -- - On the idol head of the Jivaro Indians of Ecuador: with an account of the Jivaro Indians - William Bollaert - 1863 -- - The Indians of northeastern Peru - Günter Tessmann - 1930 --^
    a study in sociometric anthropology - Bengt Danielson - 1949 -- - Jivaro souls - Michael J. Harner - 1962 -- - A Visit among the Jivaro Indians - W. Reiss - 1880 -- - The Jívaro: people of the sacred waterfalls - Michael J. Harner - 1973 -- - Music, modernization, and westernization among the Macuma Shuar - William Belzner - 1981 -- - The Federación Shuar and the colonization frontier - Ernesto Salazar - 1981 -- - Preface to the 1984 edition - Michael J. Harner - 1984 -- - Effects of contact on revenge hostilities among the Achuará Jívaro - Jane Bennett Ross - 1984 -- - Blood feud and table manners: a neo-Hobbesian approach to Jivaroan warfare - James S. Boster - 2003 -- - ARUTAM and culture change - James S. Boster - 2003 -- - 'Requiem for the omniscient informant': there's life in the old girl yet - James Shilts Boster - 1985
  • Contributor: Karsten, Rafael [Other]; Stirling, Matthew Williams [Other]; Simson, Alfred [Other]; Up de Graff, Fritz W. [Other]; Flornoy, Bertrand [Other]; Farabee, William Curtis [Other]; Dickey, Herbert Spencer [Other]; Bennett, Wendell Clark [Other]; Rivet, Paul [Other]; Meyers, Harry [Other]; Orchard, William C. [Other]; Hermessen, J. L. [Other]; Métraux, Alfred [Other]; Dyott, George Miller [Other]; Wright, Harry Bernard [Other]; Brüning, Hans H. [Other]; Bollaert, William [Other]; Tessmann, Günter [Other]; Danielson, Bengt [Other]; Harner, Michael J. [Other]; Reiss, W. [Other]; Belzner, William [Other]; Salazar, Ernesto [Other]; Bennett Ross, Jane [Other]
  • Corporation: Human Relations Area Files, Inc
  • Published: New Haven, Conn: Human Relations Area Files, Inc, 2006
  • Published in: eHRAF World Cultures
  • Language: English
  • RVK notation: LB 24655 : Tropische Andenstaaten
  • Keywords: Amazon River ; Indians of South America--Amazon River Valley ; Jivaran languages ; Jivaro Indians ; Shuar Indians ; South America--Description and travel
  • Reproduction series: eHRAF World Cultures
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: This collection includes 30 English language documents, three translated from the German and three from the French, that contain specific data on the Jivaroan-speaking groups of southeastern Ecuador and adjacent Peru, including the Jivaro (Shuar, Shuara), Achuara (Atchuara, Achual), Huambisa, Aguaruna, Mayna, and the extinct Palta and Malacata. The major time span of the works in this collection ranges from about 1863 to 2003. Karsten, Stirling, Ḿetraux, and Harner provide the most comprehensive coverage of traditional Jivaro ethnography, supplemented to a much lesser extent by the brief summaries in Simson, Farabee, Reiss, and Hermessen. War, warfare related ceremonies, including data on head-hunting and the preparation of the shrunken heads, are prominent themes in Up de Graff, Dickey, Bollert, and Bennett Ross. Other ethnographic topics of interest in this collection are: the evaluation of missionaries, their activities and other reports in Rivet, Salazar, and Harner. The influence of Western music on the traditional music of the Jivaro is discussed in Belzner. The formation and activities of the Shuar (Jivaro) Federation in lowland Ecuador are described in Salazar and Harner. Two studies of Jivaro anthropometry will be found in Meyers and Wright . The Shuar are the best known subgroup and a major focus of this collection