<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?><article xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance">
<front>
<journal-meta>
<journal-id>0104-9313</journal-id>
<journal-title><![CDATA[Mana]]></journal-title>
<abbrev-journal-title><![CDATA[Mana]]></abbrev-journal-title>
<issn>0104-9313</issn>
<publisher>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[Programa de Pós-Graduação em Antropologia Social - PPGAS-Museu Nacional, da Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro - UFRJ]]></publisher-name>
</publisher>
</journal-meta>
<article-meta>
<article-id>S0104-93132008000100001</article-id>
<title-group>
<article-title xml:lang="en"><![CDATA[Too many owners: mastery and ownership in Amazonia]]></article-title>
<article-title xml:lang="pt"><![CDATA[Donos demais: maestria e domínio na Amazônia]]></article-title>
</title-group>
<contrib-group>
<contrib contrib-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[Fausto]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Carlos]]></given-names>
</name>
</contrib>
<contrib contrib-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[Rodgers]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[David]]></given-names>
</name>
</contrib>
</contrib-group>
<aff id="A">
<institution><![CDATA[,  ]]></institution>
<addr-line><![CDATA[ ]]></addr-line>
</aff>
<pub-date pub-type="pub">
<day>00</day>
<month>00</month>
<year>2008</year>
</pub-date>
<pub-date pub-type="epub">
<day>00</day>
<month>00</month>
<year>2008</year>
</pub-date>
<volume>4</volume>
<numero>se</numero>
<fpage>0</fpage>
<lpage>0</lpage>
<copyright-statement/>
<copyright-year/>
<self-uri xlink:href="http://socialsciences.scielo.org/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&amp;pid=S0104-93132008000100001&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><self-uri xlink:href="http://socialsciences.scielo.org/scielo.php?script=sci_abstract&amp;pid=S0104-93132008000100001&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><self-uri xlink:href="http://socialsciences.scielo.org/scielo.php?script=sci_pdf&amp;pid=S0104-93132008000100001&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><abstract abstract-type="short" xml:lang="en"><p><![CDATA[This text is concerned with a specific Indigenous category - usually translated as "owner" or "master" - which, in Amazonia, transcends the simple expression of a relationship of property or domain. The category and its reciprocal terms designate a generalized mode of relating that characterizes interactions between humans, between non-humans, between humans and non-humans and between persons and things. It is a key category for understanding Indigenous sociologies and cosmologies, which, notwithstanding its importance, has received relatively little attention. Through the analysis of ethnographical evidence, this text seeks to explore the consequences of imagining the Amerindian universe as a world of owners and the owner as a model for the magnified person, in order to discuss notions of ownership, domain and power in lowland South America.]]></p></abstract>
<abstract abstract-type="short" xml:lang="pt"><p><![CDATA[O texto versa sobre certa categoria indígena - usualmente traduzida por "dono" ou "mestre" - que, na Amazônia, transcende em muito a simples expressão de uma relação de propriedade ou domínio. A categoria e seus recíprocos designam um modo generalizado de relação, que caracteriza interações entre humanos, entre não-humanos, entre humanos e não-humanos e entre pessoas e coisas. Trata-se de uma categoria-chave para a compreensão da sociologia e da cosmologia indígenas que, não obstante, recebeu relativamente pouca atenção. Esse texto visa explorar, a partir de um conjunto de evidências etnográficas, as conseqüências de imaginar-se o universo ameríndio como um mundo de donos e o dono como o modelo da pessoa magnificada, com o objetivo de discutir noções de posse, domínio e poder nas terras baixas da América do Sul.]]></p></abstract>
<kwd-group>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[Amazonia]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[Property]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[Power]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[Person]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[Individualism]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[Amazônia]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[Propriedade]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[Poder]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[Pessoa]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[Individualismo]]></kwd>
</kwd-group>
</article-meta>
</front><body><![CDATA[ <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="4"><b>Too many owners:    mastery and ownership in Amazonia<a href="#_edn1" name="_ednref1" title=""><sup>1</sup></a></b></font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="3"><b>Donos demais:    maestria e dom&iacute;nio na Amaz&ocirc;nia</b></font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><b>Carlos Fausto</b></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Translated by David    Rodgers    <br>   Translation from <a href="http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0104-93132008000200003&lng=en&nrm=iso&tlng=pt" target="_blank"><b>Mana</b>,    Rio de Janeiro, v.14, n.2, p. 329-366, Oct. 2008.</a></font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p>&nbsp;</p> <hr size="1" noshade>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="verdana" size="2"><b>ABSTRACT</b></font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">This text is concerned with a specific Indigenous    category &#150; usually translated as &quot;owner&quot; or &quot;master&quot;    &#150; which, in Amazonia, transcends the simple expression of a relationship    of property or domain. The category and its reciprocal terms designate a generalized    mode of relating that characterizes interactions between humans, between non-humans,    between humans and non-humans and between persons and things. It is a key category    for understanding Indigenous sociologies and cosmologies, which, notwithstanding    its importance, has received relatively little attention. Through the analysis    of ethnographical evidence, this text seeks to explore the consequences of imagining    the Amerindian universe as a world of owners and the owner as a model for the    magnified person, in order to discuss notions of ownership, domain and power    in lowland South America.</font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2"><b>Key words:</b> Amazonia, Property, Power,    Person, Individualism</font></p> <hr size="1" noshade>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2"><b>RESUMO</b></font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2">O texto versa sobre certa categoria ind&iacute;gena    &#150; usualmente traduzida por &quot;dono&quot; ou &quot;mestre&quot; &#150;    que, na Amaz&ocirc;nia, transcende em muito a simples express&atilde;o de uma    rela&ccedil;&atilde;o de propriedade ou dom&iacute;nio. A categoria e seus rec&iacute;procos    designam um modo generalizado de rela&ccedil;&atilde;o, que caracteriza intera&ccedil;&otilde;es    entre humanos, entre n&atilde;o-humanos, entre humanos e n&atilde;o-humanos    e entre pessoas e coisas. Trata-se de uma categoria-chave para a compreens&atilde;o    da sociologia e da cosmologia ind&iacute;genas que, n&atilde;o obstante, recebeu    relativamente pouca aten&ccedil;&atilde;o. Esse texto visa explorar, a partir    de um conjunto de evid&ecirc;ncias etnogr&aacute;ficas, as conseq&uuml;&ecirc;ncias    de imaginar-se o universo amer&iacute;ndio como um mundo de donos e o dono como    o modelo da pessoa magnificada, com o objetivo de discutir no&ccedil;&otilde;es    de posse, dom&iacute;nio e poder nas terras baixas da Am&eacute;rica do Sul.</font></p>     <p><font face="verdana" size="2"><b>Palavras-chave:</b> Amaz&ocirc;nia, Propriedade,    Poder, Pessoa, Individualismo</font></p> <hr size="1" noshade>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">This text discusses    an indigenous Amazonian category &#150; usually translated as 'owner' or 'master'    &#150; which far transcends a simple expression of a relation of ownership, authority    or domination. The category and its reciprocal terms designate a mode of relationship    that applies to humans, non-humans, and things. I argue that it comprises a    key category in terms of our comprehension of indigenous sociology and cosmology,    despite receiving relatively little attention thus far. In fact, Seeger first    called our attention to this kind of relationship three decades ago:</font></p>     <blockquote>        ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The concept of      the owner-controller permeates Suyá society, even though there is relatively      little property in the material sense of the word &#91;...&#93; But it is a fallacy      of ethnocentrism to maintain that ownership and property are unimportant (1981:181-2).</font></p> </blockquote>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The reasons for    this omission are linked to a widespread view of the South American lowlands    as a realm of equality and symmetry, in contrast to the hierarchy and asymmetry    predominant in the Old World and the Andean region. This horizontal conception    of social relations &#150; conceived either under the rubric of sociopolitical equality    or of symmetrical reciprocity &#150; has marked the literature from the early chroniclers    to modern ethnology. The notion of owner fits uncomfortably into this sociopolitical    imagery, not only because of the asymmetry of the relation that defines it,    but also because of its potential evocation of private property. Consequently,    the mastery-ownership relation has ended up consigned to ethnographic footnotes,    or reduced to a simple ontological category, that of the masters or owners of    nature.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">This paper looks    to show that, on the contrary, mastery is as central to understanding indigenous    sociocosmologies as affinity. Here I return to a problem that I first attempted    to examine some ten years ago via the notion of 'familiarizing predation' &#150;    a schema through which predatory relations are converted into asymmetric relations    of control and protection, conceptualized as a form of adoption (Fausto 1997).    Now I propose to imagine the Amerindian world as a <i>world of owners</i> and    the owner as a model of the <i>magnified person</i> (Strathern 1991).</font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="3"><b>The owner-master    category</b></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">As far as I know,    all Amazonian languages possess a term &#150; historically, fairly stable &#150; that    designates a position involving control and/or protection, engendering and/or    possession, and that applies to relations between persons (human or non-human)    and between persons and things (tangible or intangible). This term is highly    productive and applies over a wide spectrum.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Seeger writes that    for the Suyá "most things have owner-controllers: villages, ceremonies, songs,    houses, gardens, belongings, pets and so forth. The importance of <i>kande</i>    is pervasive" (1981:182). The term <i>kande</i>, 'owner-controller,' not only    refers to the possession of tangible and intangible wealth (such as ritual knowledge)    but also to the potential ability to produce these goods. It also forms expressions    designating social functions endowed with prestige and political power: thus    war leaders were called <i>weropakande</i>, 'owners of our village,' while the    ritual specialist is known as <i>mërokïnkande</i>. Indeed, Seeger states that    <i>kande </i>is "the most important concept in Suyá thinking about power" (1981:181).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The category's    importance is also apparent in the multilingual system of the Upper Xingu. Viveiros    de Castro (2002a:82-3) claims that it constitutes "a fundamental notion of Xinguano    culture," applicable to a wide range of contexts, its concrete model being paternity.    Among the Yawalapiti, <i>wököti</i> designates the ritual sponsor, the specialist    song master, the master of animals and plants, the chief, as well as designating    an owner in the sense we would ordinarily attribute.<a href="#_edn2" name="_ednref2" title=""><sup>2</sup></a>    In all these cases, the category defines a relation between a subject and a    resource: the owner is the mediator between this resource and the collective    to which he or she belongs.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Among the Kuikuro,    a Carib people of the Upper Xingu, the category <i>oto</i> applies to the same    semantic field and likewise takes filiation as its basic schema. Parents are    'our owners' (<i>kukotomo</i>) because they take care of us and feed us. To    be the owner of a collective structure &#150; owner of the ritual path (<i>ama oto</i>),    the men's house (<i>kuakutu oto</i>), the central plaza (<i>hugogó oto</i>)    and the village itself (<i>eté oto</i>) &#150; implies care since the owner must    maintain these structures and feed the people who help in this task. Being an    owner implies prestige and responsibility: sponsors of rituals become public    people who feed the collectivity, including the spirit-owners of the festival,    considered the sponsor's 'children.' As in the Suyá and Yawalapiti cases, the    owner-master category also applies to the depositaries of intangible knowledge:    the ritual specialists are called 'song masters' (<i>eginhoto</i>), the healers    are 'incantation masters' (<i>kehege oto</i>), the sorcerers are 'spell masters'    (<i>kugihe oto</i>) and so on.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Among Tupi-Guarani    peoples, the vernacular terms for the category 'owner' are cognates of *jar    and have been well-known since the 16th century. Viveiros de Castro tells us    that the Araweté cognate <i>ñã</i> connotes ideas such as "leadership, control,    representation, responsibility, and ownership of some resource or domain" (1992:345).    Among the Parakanã, the most common reciprocal term of -jara is 'pet' (while    in the Upper Xingu, as we have seen, the reciprocal is 'child'): the concrete    schema for the ownership relation is familiarization of the young of animal    prey (Fausto 2001:347-8). This is also true for other Tupi-Guarani peoples,    such as the Wayãpi, for whom "all jar have 'their young,' which they treat like    <i>eima</i>, or wild pets" (Gallois 1988:98). The same category appears in Hans    Staden's account of his capture by the Tupinambá, who said to him: <i>xé remimbaba    in dé</i>, "you are my pet " (2008 &#91;1557&#93;:52).</font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Very similar cognates    are employed in the Panoan languages of Western Amazonia to designate the owner-master.    In Sharanahua, <i>ifo</i> refers to the genitor in relation to his children,    the chief in relation to his people, the owner in relation to the objects in    his or her possession, and the owner in relation to domestic animals. Déléage    (2005:189-91) notes that the semantic connotations of the term <i>ifo</i> include    authority, genesis and commensality. Owners originate whatever entities they    possess since they made them, whether the entity fabricated is a person or thing    (in Amazonia, the notion of fabrication applies both to things and to the bodies    of kin and pet animals). <i>Ifo</i> also designates a particular type of entity:    the masters of animals and plants with whom shamans interact.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">This category of    owner-master is extremely widespread in the region and corresponds to what Hultkrantz    (1961) termed "the supernatural owners of nature." Until recently, ethnology    limited itself to these figures when speaking of owners or masters, depicting    them as hyperboles of the species they represent or the anthropomorphic form    through which they appear to shamans. Despite their importance, these figures    need to be reinserted in the overall set of ownership relations, since, as Cesarino    notes in relation to another Pano people, the animal owners "replicate the same    configuration that characterizes the Marubo maloca owners (<i>shovõ ivo</i>):    both are chiefs of their houses, in which they live with their families and    have their own ways of being" (2008:25). The masters of the animals are therefore    owners in their own environment, containing a collectivity within themselves:    they represent and contain a species.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Among the Kanamari,    a Katukina people of Western Amazonia, recursivity is the main trait of the    category <i>warah-</i>, meaning owner, chief, body, trunk, or main river.<a href="#_edn3" name="_ednref3" title=""><sup>3</sup></a>    Luiz Costa emphasizes the intrinsic relationality of the category: "a person    is always a 'chief/body/owner' in relation to something, someone or some people"    (2007:63). <i>Warah</i> expresses a relation of container-contained, singularity-plurality,    such that "the name of a person followed by <i>&#150;warah</i> designates not only    that person's body, but also, in the case of chiefs, all those people who call    that person 'my body-owner' ('my chief'), along with all the belongings of the    person whose name forms the noun phrase 'X<i>-warah</i>' &#91;…&#93;." (Costa 2008:4).    This structure is replicated at different scales: between the soul and its body,    between a people and their chief, between the village chief and the chief of    a hydrographic network, and so forth. The cosmic limit of this relation is the    primordial Jaguar, which, at the 'moment zero' of the cosmos, contained within    its body all the different singularities in virtual existence.<a href="#_edn4" name="_ednref4" title=""><sup>4</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">So what general    features of the category 'owner-master' can we extract from these examples?    First of all, we need to shift our emphasis from the ontological category to    the relation it implies (Déléage 2005:191). Beyond exploring the concept of    owner-master in Amazonia, we need to analyze a relational schema that applies    to innumerable contexts. If the category presumes a relationship, it demands    a reciprocal category: this seems to oscillate between 'child' and 'pet animal,'    both implying an underlying idea of adoption. The prototypical relation of mastery-ownership    is, then, <i>adoptive filiation</i>, a relation that is not given but constituted,    frequently through the dynamic I have called familiarizing predation (Fausto    1999). I have illustrated the pregnancy of this relational schema in the domains    of shamanism, warfare and ritual in previous works, making it unnecessary to    repeat these examples here. It is merely worth recalling that the same schema    accounts for relations as diverse as those between the shaman and auxiliary    spirits, the warrior and the captive child, the killer and the victim's spirit,    or the ritual officiant and the ceremonial objects.<a href="#_edn5" name="_ednref5" title=""><sup>5</sup></a> Combining the findings    of these earlier works with the examples given above, we can infer that the    mastery-ownership relation:</font></p>     <blockquote>        <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">a) frequently      applies to the possession of certain material items (principally ceremonial      objects) and immaterial items (especially ritual knowledge); </font></p>       <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">b) does not always      designate the parent-child relation, although it almost always applies to      the relation between parents and adoptive children, in particular war captives;</font></p>       <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">c) never applies      to autonomous living enemies, but it may designate the relation between the      killer and his victim after the killing; </font></p>       <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">d) never applies,      either, to game animals, although it designates the relation to pets and,      very frequently, the shaman's relation to auxiliary spirits;</font></p>       <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">e) often applies      to the relation between chiefs and their followers and, as we shall see later,      was used to designate new relations in the context of conquest and colonization;</font></p>       ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">f) does not apply      solely to relations between humans (or humans and non-humans), but also designates      relations internal to the non-human world.</font></p> </blockquote>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">One of the important    features of this relation is its asymmetry: the owners control and protect their    creatures, being responsible for their well-being, reproduction and mobility.    This asymmetry implies not only control but care. Hence, the master of the animals    among the Chimane of Bolivia is defined as <i>chojca-csi-ty</i>, "the one who    watches over them, who looks after them, who cares for them" (Daillant 2003:317).    From the perspective of whoever is adopted-captured, being or placing oneself    in the position of an orphan or a wild pet is more than just a negative and    inescapable injunction: it may also be &#150; as we shall see later &#150; a positive    way of eliciting attention and generosity.<a href="#_edn6" name="_ednref6" title=""><sup>6</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The asymmetry of    the ownership relation is very often conceived as a form of encompassment, sometimes    expressed as a relation between container and contained. For example, the masters    of animals usually keep their animals in an enclosure or container, releasing    them slowly to be hunted by humans. For the Chimane, the master keeps "his animals    in corrals &#91;...&#93; releasing them, from time to time, via a door" (Daillant 2003:303).    An Arara shaman once explained to Teixeira-Pinto that the owners (<i>oto</i>)    of animal species keep their 'creatures' (<i>iamït</i>)<i> </i>in a box, like    the closets made by whites (1997:97).<a href="#_edn7" name="_ednref7" title=""><sup>7</sup></a> </font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Shamans also store    their auxiliary spirits in containers. Some keep them inside baskets and feed    them with tobacco; others insert them into their own body in the form of resins    or stones, literally containing them. For instance, the Wayãpi <i>õpi-wan</i>    caterpillars, anthropomorphic auxiliary spirits of the shaman, are contained    within his body, wrapped in tiny slings, just as the shamans are wrapped in    the webs linking them to the masters of animals (Gallois 1996:46-47). This is    likewise the case of the Kanamari <i>dyohko</i>, solidified bits of plant resin    that are kept by shamans within their own bodies, but may also be placed in    baskets to be thrown as magic darts or to wander in the forest in the form of    jaguars (Costa 2007:381-383). The same applies to the Zápara magic stones fed    with tobacco by the shaman, who keeps them in a bag, though they may also be    incorporated into the owner (Bilhaut 2007:57-61). The topology is always complex    since the shaman's auxiliaries appear as internal and external parts of the    owner-master simultaneously.<a href="#_edn8" name="_ednref8" title=""><sup>8</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">This topology also    involves an interplay between singularity and multiplicity: the owner is a plural    singularity, containing other singularities within himself as a body (Costa    2007) or a maloca (Cesarino 2008). The owner-master is, therefore, the form    through which a plurality appears as a singularity to others. It is in this    sense that the chief is an owner. When speaking in the central plaza, the Kuikuro    chief refers to all the inhabitants of his village, irrespective of sex or age,    as his 'children' (<i>kangamuke</i>). All other distinctions are obviated for    him to appear as an inclusive singularity, a magnified person (Heckenberger    2005:259-263). The <i>chief-form</i> &#150; the body, the bow-in-the-hand, the speech    commemorating the unique history of the Kuikuro people (Franchetto 1993) &#150; appears    to the eyes of the messengers from other villages as a people, an <i>otomo</i>    (the collectivized form of the term 'owner'). In this sense, rather than being    a representative (i.e. someone occupying the place of another), the master-chief    is the form through which a collective is constituted as an image: it comprises    the form in which a singularity is presented <i>to others</i>.<a href="#_edn9" name="_ednref9" title=""><sup>9</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">As a singular image    of a collectivity, the master-chief form also applies to the owners of animals.    The prototypical example is the figure of the master of peccaries. Here the    master is a chief who contains a collectivity of peccaries, conceived as his    children or wild pets. For the master to appear as a magnified singularity,    the band must appear as an anonymous collectivity without its own agency. This    is why I have argued elsewhere that the master represents the jaguar-part, while    the band represents the game-part, the passive aspect of the peccaries (Fausto    2007:509).<a href="#_edn10" name="_ednref10" title=""><sup>10</sup></a> In Amazonia,    every magnified singularity appears to the eyes of others as a predator, usually    as a jaguar, anaconda or harpy eagle.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The owner is, then,    a double-sided figure: in the eyes of his children-pets, a protective father;    in the eyes of other species (especially humans), a predatory affine. Jaguarness    is one of the traits associated with the figure of the master in Amazonia. Even    the mild-tempered and non-aggressive Upper Xingu chief covers himself in parts    of a jaguar body when he ritually greets dignitaries from other villages: a    belt and hat made from the animal's pelt, a necklace made from its claws. In    an sense, every master is a jaguar. And it is easy to understand why: the main    device for producing encompassment and hence for magnifying the person is cannibal    incorporation. Predation is an asymmetric vector of identification-alteration:    by eating, one contains the other and its alterity within oneself.</font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="3"><b>Possessive (in)dividualism</b></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Thus far I have    shown how the notions of <i>owner</i> and <i>ownership</i> are indispensable    to our comprehension of indigenous Amazonia. The absence of private ownership    of important material resources has blocked our conceptual imagination of ownership    relations, as though their model par excellence were exclusive private ownership    of goods, corresponding to a consumerist and expansive <i>conatus</i>. In the    Amerindian case, though, the possession of objects must be seen as a particular    case of the ownership relation between subjects, and the thing-artefact as a    particular case of the person-artefact. As Sztutman writes, mastery is "a cosmological    notion that is reflected on the sociopolitical plane, referring in very general    terms to this capacity to 'contain' &#150; to appropriate or dispose of &#150; persons,    things and properties, and to constitute domains, niches and groups" (2005:261).</font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">If Amerindian ownership    relations are not to be confused with our conception of property relations,    how precisely can or should we compare them? How do we speak of owners and ownership    without reviving the spectre of possessive individualism that so much of contemporary    anthropology strives to exorcise? I lack the space here for an exhaustive comparison,    so I shall concentrate instead on a single, though, emblematic, author, John    Locke.<a href="#_edn11" name="_ednref11" title=""><sup>11</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">I begin with the    double problem confronted by Locke in his refutation of absolutism and patriarchalism    in <i>Two Treatises of Government</i>: on one hand, he looked to lay the foundations    for individual freedom and, therefore, the limits of Government; on the other,    he sought to base private property on natural law, despite positing an originary    state in which the world was given in common to all. Locke located the solution    to both problems in the concept of self-ownership, the originary and exclusive    relation of a person to him or herself, which simultaneously founds both freedom    and property: "Though the Earth, and all inferior Creatures be common to all    Men, yet every Man has a <i>Property</i> in his own <i>Person</i>. This no Body    has any Right to but himself" (Locke 1988:287 &#150; Book II, Chapter V, § 27).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">If self-ownership    makes despotism and slavery contrary to natural law, how then do we pass from    this self-relation to the relation between persons and things? How are legitimate    ties established between a subject and an object to the exclusion of other subjects?    For Locke, the extension of self-ownership to things is achieved through labour.    Objects are contaminated, so to speak, by the action of the body, an action    that belongs exclusively to the agent and that removes things from their natural    state and annexes them to the self as its exclusive property. This reasoning,    known as the labour-mixing argument, implies that labour is mixed with things,    adding to them something that belongs to the subject of the action (Locke 1988:288;    Bk.II, Ch.V, § 27).<a href="#_edn12" name="_ednref12" title=""><sup>12</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The Lockian theory    of ownership presupposes a theory of personal identity, since it is necessary    to found the subject to which an originary right over the self is attributed.    What ensures its continuity in time and space? How do we know if it is always    the same and not other? According to Locke, personal identity is founded on    the continuity of consciousness, on the subject's reflexive relation with him    or herself. A person is a "thinking intelligent being, that has reason and reflection,    and can consider itself as itself, the same thinking thing, in different times    and places" (Locke 1987:xxx; Bk.II, Ch.XXVII, § 9). Here sameness and selfhood    merge, since both depend on a relation to self, a self-identity. <i>Mêmeté etipseité</i>, to use Ricouer's vocabulary (1990), become indissociable in    the construction of the person. The self must be identical to itself ("the same    thinking thing in different times and places") in order for it to become the    object of a judgment: without identity the pairing of moral responsibility and    legal accountability cannot be constructed; without reducing difference to zero,    sociability cannot be founded on appropriative individuals who are free because    they own themselves.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Locke's theory    of property activates a series of cosmological and anthropological premises.    We have a divinity who fabricates a world peopled by subjects (human beings)    and useful things (animals, plants, land...) given in common to humanity. These    subjects have two main attributes: firstly, a self-identity that is maintained    over time and makes their acts accountable (to God and to Men); secondly, they    are owners (the cause) of their acts by being owners of their own body, which    is the means by which these acts have efficacy on the world. Actions on the    world &#150; conceptualized under the category of labour &#150; lead to the appropriation    of useful things, meaning that what was given in common becomes individuated    and owned by some to the exclusion of others. In social life, this process leads    to a distinction between owners and non-owners where the former, through their    ownership of things that are added to their own body, acquire a surplus of agency.    The owner thus becomes the model of the agent and appropriated goods are transformed    into indices of the person's capacity for agency.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">How would an indigenous    narrative compare with this Lockian account of the constitution of the person    and society, freedom and obligation? Were we to narrate it in an Amerindian    key, what kind of world would emerge? Undoubtedly indigenous cosmologies activate    very different premises, not because these peoples lack a conception of ownership    or a mechanism of appropriation but because their cosmologies are based on very    different principles. As an experiment in conceptual imagination, let us now    try to tell the same story from another viewpoint.</font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="3"><b>A world of owners</b></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">In the beginning,    the world was not given by a divinity to all humans in common for them to appropriate    it. The ontology of mythic time does not establish two major classes of beings:    on one hand, autonomous subjects (self-owners); on the other, appropriable things    (potential properties). No definitive separation exists between subjects and    objects. The mythic world is pervaded by a background of continuous subjectivity,    a communicational flux involving all existents. In contrast to the original    identity with God-Substance, this state is, as Viveiros de Castro argues (1998:41;    2007:51), a state of infinite differences, internal to the person, characterized    by an ontological regime of metamorphosis.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">In this primordial    state, difference is presupposed, though not yet posed, since what myth narrates    is precisely the positing of difference &#150; that is, the production of discontinuities    between species, between human collectivities, between sky and earth, between    day and night, between dry land and water, differences that, combined, will    constitute the world as we know it. And it is precisely the potential owners,    beings with creative and transformative capacities, that will engender-fabricate    the post-mythic world through their actions and <i>their lapses</i>.</font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<blockquote>        <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The First People      lived just as shamans do today, in a polymorphous state in which no boundaries      yet existed. It was the time of origins (<i>illud tempus</i>) when Heaven      and Earth were still connected and the distinctions between species not yet      recognized. Only when these divisions solidified did the First People finally      remove themselves from Earth, leaving their forms behind as reminders of what      this Dream Time had been like. After their withdrawal from the Earth, each      of the First People became the 'Master' or <i>arache</i> of the species they      engendered (Guss 1989:52).</font></p> </blockquote>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Not only 'natural'    attributes are determined in this process of speciation; the 'cultural' attributes    of each species are also defined. This definition often derives from the transfer    of ownership from one being to another. Many indigenous etiological myths narrate    not so much an origin-genesis as the way in which attributes that typify human    sociality were appropriated from animals. Culinary fire is the most famous example:    in the Tupi-Guarani myths, the theft of the fire owned by vultures makes humans    become eaters of cooked meat in opposition to necrophagy; in the Gê myths, the    theft of fire from jaguars leads to the distinction between a raw (cannibal)    diet and cooked food, capable of producing identity between kin (Fausto 2002a,    2007).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The Gê narratives    resonate particularly well with the argument of this text since here transspecific    dynamism is founded on adoptive filiation. We pass from an initial relation    between brothers-in-law to a relation of familiarization between a boy and a    jaguar.<a href="#_edn13" name="_ednref13" title=""><sup>13</sup></a> In the    Kayapó-Gorotire version, "the jaguar's wife (who was an Indian) didn't like    the boy, who she called <i>me-on-kra-tun</i> ('foreign' 'or abandoned child');    nonetheless, jaguar, who had no children, decides to adopt him" (Lévi-Strauss    1964:75). The adoptive father goes hunting everyday to feed the child, leaving    him alone with an anti-mother. So he can defend himself, the jaguar gives the    boy a bow and arrow with which he ends up killing his adoptive father's wife.    He then takes the jaguar's belongings: the bow, cotton thread and cooking fire    (Kayapó-Kubenkranken version). By refusing adoption, the boy reinstates the    enmity that thereafter marks the relation between jaguars and humans, while    reconstituting the kinship ties with his own kind.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The post-mythic    world that emerges from this initial dynamic is a world of multiple domains.    These domains structure the cosmos, meaning that one of the premises informing    human action over what we call the natural world is that <i>everything has or    can have an owner</i>. As Descola has shown (1986), nature is domestic because    it is always the <i>domus</i> of someone. For the Achuar, the forest is the    plantation of Shakaim, wild animals are the young kin of the 'mothers of the    game,' and cultivated plants are cared for by Nunkui, the spirit-woman who gave    rise to cultigens. The non-human world does not belong to everyone, nor is it    the land of no one. As the Kuikuro would say, the world is not <i>tatutolo engü</i>,    'everyone's thing,' which would be the same as saying 'there's nobody to care    for it.'<a href="#_edn14" name="_ednref14" title=""><sup>14</sup></a> It is    precisely because there are owners who zealously protect their possessions that    the Kuikuro, before embarking on a collective fishing trip, proffer a lengthy    incantation in which they name all the masters of the water, asking them not    to prey on those who are fishing or to hide their fish (Fausto, Franchetto &amp;    Montagnani 2007). This incantation is intended to induce a generous disposition    in the owners, persuading them to relinquish their precious things.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">If the indigenous    world is a world of owners, what kind of domains do they own? Referring to the    Guarani-Kaiowá, Mura suggests that:</font></p>     <blockquote>        <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">from the viewpoint      of the tradition of indigenous knowledge, it is impossible to imagine the      existence of places, paths, living beings and inanimate beings as neutral,      autonomous and owner-less. All the elements composing the current Cosmos possess      owners, constituting domains and reflecting an extremely significant logic      in the Universe's hierarchization &#91;...&#93; (2006:234-235).</font></p> </blockquote>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The world is therefore    divided into different domains, or spaces of domesticity, pertaining to humans    and non-humans, each with its own owners-masters. Gallois (1984) even suggests    that, for the Wayãpi, there are a finite number of domains, each of which could    in theory be exhaustively described. Referring to the Araweté, Viveiros de Castro    argues somewhat differently that:</font></p>     <blockquote>        ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The juridical      notion of ownership is the least important aspect and not even always present.      The Araweté do not have a general conception of the cosmos as a set of domains      possessed by different <i>ñã</i> &#91;owners&#93; with whom man must come to terms      or fight (1992:345-6).</font></p> </blockquote>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Although the Araweté    cosmos is peopled by dozens of ferocious cannibal owners (Viveiros de Castro    1992:77-82), humans do not have to negotiate with them continually in their    everyday activities. Indeed, the relation that really preoccupies the Araweté    is between the living and the dead or, more precisely, between the living and    divinities via the dead. The Parakanã are also unconcerned with negotiating    any act of predation or appropriation since they do not postulate the existence    of animal or plant masters, meaning no risk is involved in preying on other    species. However, various Amazonian peoples not only conceive the world to be    made of multiple domains, they are also conscious of the fact that, to live,    humans are compelled to ignore their limits: planting, hunting and fishing require    them to invade these alien spaces, almost always with predatory intentions.    The Miraña of the Caquetá river, for example, conceive the forest to be the    domain of the masters of animals, who "reign there in the same way that the    human maloca masters reign over their people" (Karadimas 2005:342). Human intrusions    into this space "are perceived as bellicose acts against animals, undertaken    in an identical fashion to the war expeditions of the past" (2005:344).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Even the production    of certain artefacts can be dangerous, since, as Guss indicates, it implies    a "transfer of ownership" (1989:61), a transfer conceptualized by the author    as a "conversion of wild objects into domestic ones" (1989:95). For example,    before Yekuana men can take the canes used to make their famous bicolour flat    baskets, they must ask a shaman to negotiate with Yododai &#150; the master who plants    the canes and protects them. Permission obtained, a series of rules must then    be observed while cutting the cane and making the baskets, a process during    which a design emerges that is associated with Odosha, the prototypical figure    of predation (1989:106-7;130-2). The process of conversion-domestication described    by Guss is also, therefore, the fabrication of a jaguar-artefact.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">In sum, everything    in principle has or may have an owner: the forest, animals, rivers and lakes,    but also an animal species, another plant species, or a particular stand of    bamboo, a curve of the river, a certain tree, a particular mountain. Claiming    that the current cosmos is structured by ownership relations does not mean,    though, conceiving it to be organized exhaustively into discrete spaces (territories    and jurisdictions), as though resulting from a series of enclosure acts decreed    at the end of mythic time. The passage from the continuous to the discrete describes    this process Amerindian mythology implies the constitution of a world <i>traversed    by ownership relations</i>, but not a cosmic cartography of discrete and exclusive    properties. These ownership relations are multiple and potentially infinite.    Neither are they given once and for all: they have a post-mythic dynamic in    which beings can appropriate or can become appropriated, inserting themselves    within a new ownership relation. Objects are fabricated, children are engendered,    capacities are acquired, animals are captured, enemies are killed, spirits are    familiarized, human collectivities are conquered.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">This dynamic operates    in the macro-relations between collectivities and in the microproduction of    the person, which is constituted and deconstituted continually by appropriating    others and being appropriated in turn. This person is not a unitary 'self-identical    self,' therefore. Merely announcing, though, that it is a 'distributed' or 'relational'    person is insufficient. Locke's theory of personal identity is not based exactly    on a self-enclosed individual in contrast to the relational person of Amazonia,    Melanesia or wherever. As Balibar points out, Locke takes identity to be a relation,    which implies "that it presupposes difference, or that it is &#91;...&#93; a certain    way of dealing with difference &#91;...&#93; by reducing it to zero" (1998:247).<a href="#_edn15" name="_ednref15" title=""><sup>15</sup></a> Locke's model also includes a distributed    person (Gell 1998) insofar as property-objects are indices of agency. The Lockian    proprietor is a magnified person to the extent that, thanks to a relation to    self, the world can be appropriated. The own (guaranteed by self-consciousness)    and ownership (based on the private property of the body) leads to appropriation,    which magnifies persons by 'extending' them to things and 'annexing' things    to persons.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The crucial distinction    in terms of Amazonian indigenous peoples is the fact that the founding relation    here is not self-identity: the Self and the Same do not merge in the construction    of the Amerindian person.<a href="#_edn16" name="_ednref16" title=""><sup>16</sup></a>    Hence the term ownership is not the most appropriate, since the very essence    of the owner is to be altered. The multiplicity and fractality of ownership    relations imply internally composite subjects, 'self-different'persons (Viveiros    de Castro 2002b:377). The model of the agent is not, therefore, that of the    owner who annexes things to an immutable Self, but the master who contains multiple    singularities. Consequently, while both the Lockean and Amerindian models are    appropriative, the risk of the former is, as Kant would say, the 'a-social sociability'    of possessive individualism, while the risk of the latter is the cannibal sociality    of possessive singularity. The mechanisms for limiting appropriation also differ:    on one hand, the moral responsibility of the forensic person; on the other,    the sociality of kinship and the body of kin.</font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="3"><b>Magnification    and power</b></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Just as the spectre    of private property has blocked our conceptual imagination of ownership relations,    so our capacity to think of power in the South American lowlands has been obscured    by the State model and the focus on coercion. It is essential to lessen the    gulf created by centuries of polarized images, conceptual black holes that suck    in our imagination whenever we think about power in the indigenous world. It    is as though we were continually forced to choose between an anti-state model    (negatively obsessed with the State) and a model of teleological centralization    (positively obsessed with the State). We need to construct an ethnographically    informed language to conceptualize asymmetric relations in the region without    dissolving them into a swamp of symmetrization, or transforming them into seeds    containing the tiny protoplasm of a state apparatus (a statelet from which a    process of state-genesis is waiting to burst).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">As an alternative,    then, I suggest mastery as a relational schema for producing magnified persons    that contains the mechanisms both for generating potency and for undermining    power. In the microanalysis of this relation, it is crucial to identify the    mechanisms for constituting and deconstituting relations that imply control.    This seems to me a fundamental step if we are to escape the essentialist language    of Clastres, full of beings-for and beings-against, in particular his metaphysics    of primitive society <i>qua</i> the absolute.<a href="#_edn17" name="_ednref17" title=""><sup>17</sup></a></font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The term 'control'    is open to misunderstanding. Indeed, it may be tempting to abandon it entirely    given the extensive criticisms provoked by its application to non-Western contexts.    Control devices are an obsession in our mechanical, psychic and social engineering:    our relations with machines, or the person's relations to him or herself, or    the relations of collectives to their parts, are pervaded by an "imperative    of control". Indigenous mastery-ownership does not demand this same normative    imagery of social control, which, in turn, presumes the complementary notion    of deviance. Not that principles of behavioural correctness or constraints on    personal action are absent from indigenous societies. These must not be confused,    though, with our model of control, precisely to ensure we do not commit the    reverse mistake: that of abstaining from conceptualizing how people have effects    on one another.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">As far as I know,    Strathern was the first anthropologist to associate a critique of the notion    of control with the Anglo-American concept of property: "This notion of control    implies something like an exercise of proprietorship, either over attributes    'belonging' to one self or else over attributes 'belonging' to others and yielded    by them. The concept already prejudges the manner in which persons impinge upon    one another" (1988:141). Our task, then, is not to prejudge but to investigate,    in each ethnographic context, how persons impinge upon one another. The verb    'impinge' means to 'to go against,' 'to impose,' whose participle is 'impact.'    We can ask then: what impact do these masters have?</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">If the classical    Weberian definition of power as "the possibility of imposing one's own will    within a social relation despite any resistance" (Weber 1984:43) fails to apply    adequately to the Amerindian context, this stems more from the notion of 'own    will' than 'imposing.' Magnified persons are constituted precisely by incorporating    relations with alien-subjects endowed with other-wills, imposing their perspective    but under the constant risk of losing it. The master's potency is the capacity    to extract an action from his wild pet. This is coercion, as Strathern would    say (1988:272). But here we find an ambivalence, since it is impossible to know    who caused the action and who is acting. Who is the agent of the Araweté warrior's    song, the killer or his victim (Viveiros de Castro 1992:241-245)? Who is the    Parakanã curer, the dreamer or the dreamt enemy (Fausto 2001:357-369)?</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">This paradoxical    image, in which antagonic elements are condensed and appear to be simultaneously    singular and multiple, is the very source of the ritual efficacy of these figures,    as Severi argues (2007). In Amazonia, this efficacy suffers from a constitutive    instability, since we can never know who adopted who and who controls who: to    be powerful, shamans and warriors must ensure that the subjectivity of their    wild pets is preserved, which means that they can never become entirely tamed    and domesticated (Fausto 1999a:949). This explains the ambivalence of shamans    and warriors in Amazonia, forever on the verge of adopting the perspective of    the others contained within themselves.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The alteration    induced by mastery (the fact that the master is inevitably 'affected' by his    wild pet) combines with the multiple relations contained within a magnified    person, which produces the latter's relational dispersion. As Rodgers states,    "the shaman is a multiple being, a micropopulation of shamanic agencies sheltering    within a body: hence neither are his 'intentions' exclusively 'his,' nor can    he ever be certain of his own intentions." (2002:121). This plurality also characterizes    the killer, who contains relations with different kinds of humans (his victims),    but also with non-humans, since his predatory potency must be fabricated before    the homicidal act through his 'jaguarization'. Among the Jívaro, for instance,    warfare success depends on the prior encounter with the <i>arutam</i>, the image    of an ancestor with a jaguar affection, which "will lodge in the recipient like    an internal double" (Taylor 2003:237).<a href="#_edn18" name="_ednref18" title=""><sup>18</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The fact that the    plural and altering nature of Amazonian mastery produces an instability in the    ownership relation helps explain why it has rarely crystallized into an <i>institutional    locus</i> of power. The very constitution of these functions seems to contain    the means for undermining them, since potency depends on an uncertain relation    with other-subjects who are never entirely loyal. It would be a mistake, though,    to ignore the fact that there were (and still are) institutionalized forms of    chiefdom in the region. The question, therefore, resides in knowing how the    centrifugal tendencies of the mastery-ownership relation can be blocked, turning    them into a mechanism for concentrating and localizing power.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">My intuition is    that this happened where a limit was posed to the multiplicatory and alterative    logics of warfare and shamanism. As I have argued elsewhere, indigenous warfare    involves an almost unlimited expansion of the number of killers and vital attributes    that can be obtained and transmitted by the warriors (Fausto 2001a:305-306,    330-331; Fausto 1999b:272-275). This amplification is linked to the low degree    of hierarchization of men in terms of warfare exploits, since warfare involves    multiplying the regenerative capacities to be captured rather than ranking men    according to their predatory power. Significantly the highest crystallization    of power is found where this logic is curtailed. This is the case, for example,    of some Chacoan peoples, where membership of the warrior rank was limited to    those who had actually scalped an enemy and brought back the trophy. The victim    could be handed over to a companion so he could acquire this status instead,    but each trophy corresponded to just one warrior (Clastres 1982:222; Sterpin    1993). In the Aztec case, by contrast, with a much more rigid class system,    passing on a sacrificial captive to another person was a crime punished by death    (Clendinnen 1991:116).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">These are examples    of how a mechanism of dispersion can be converted into a mechanism of concentration.    Similar processes may well have occurred in the transition from shamanic systems    to temple-priest systems, a transition in which the emergence of vertical shamanism,    associated with ancestrality, was perhaps an intermediary phase (Hugh-Jones    1994; Viveiros de Castro 2002c:471-2). If so, spatial territorialization (the    temple) and temporal territorialization (ancestrality) would have corresponded    to the conversion of multiple ownership relations into a pyramidal system of    domination. This hypothesis perhaps helps us to conceptualize the prior existence    of predatory mega-machines in the Americas &#150; state theocracies that conserved    the cannibal principle as a constitutive element of power, subsuming ancestrality    and predation within a single hierarchical structure.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Returning from    the terrain of hypotheses to the firm soil of ethnology, I turn once more to    the Kanamari category <i>warah-</i>, which Costa (2007) translates as owner-body-chief.    As we have seen, it serves to express the same structure at different scales:    souls contained in bodies, bodies contained in chiefs and chiefs contained in    other chiefs. Is there a limit to this magnification? Kanamari mythology flirts    with the image of a universal jaguar, a global body containing all the differences    found in the post-mythic world. In concrete terms, the limit was the region's    main river, the Juruá, itself conceived as a <i>&#150;warah</i> not matched by any    form of Kanamari chiefhood.<a href="#_edn19" name="_ednref19" title=""><sup>19</sup></a>    The structural locus, however, was there, waiting to be occupied by another    <i>&#150;warah</i>. As announced in Lévi-Strauss's celebrated diagram in <i>The Story    of Lynx</i>, the Kanamari structure anticipates a place for other owners &#150; or    indeed, for owners of another kind, since this position came to be occupied    by whites, as occurred elsewhere in Amazonia.</font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="3"><b>Masters in history</b></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The mastery relation    served to conceptualize the asymmetries that have branded colonial and post-colonial    history. This is a recurrent phenomenon that reappeared in native interactions    with missionaries, slave raiders, rubber bosses and, more recently, government    agents. The relational schema served as a pivot connecting the system of captives    derived from indigenous warfare and the colonial slavery system (Karadimas 2001;    Santos-Granero 2005), just as it would later serve in the debt-peonage system    of the rubber economy. The mastery relation worked to connect a system focused    on extracting the regenerative capacities of persons with another system focused    on extracting surplus labour and the production of goods. The hierarchical structure    of mastery combined with its double face (predation and protection) also served    to connect with the structures of colonial power, especially in the context    of mission settlements and, later, the tutelary system (Machado 1994).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">There are various    ethnographic examples of whites being compared to owners-masters. I explored    this point elsewhere in describing how the Western Parakanã equate the whites    with powerful dream enemies, who are conceived in turn as the dreamer's wild    pets since they cure and give songs without requesting anything in return. I    also showed that there was a curious inversion of this relation, indicated by    the vocative expression used: the dreamer addresses the bestial human enemies    as <i>wetom</i>, 'my father,' or more frequently as <i>miangá</i>, a formal    term applied to 'fathers' (but never to a person's actual father). It was precisely    this vocative that the Western Parakanã employed in their relations with white    people throughout much of the 20<sup>th</sup> century, contrasting with the    affinal terms invariably used to address indigenous enemies.<a href="#_edn20" name="_ednref20" title=""><sup>20</sup></a> This usage dates from    the end of the 19<sup>th</sup> century, when the Parakanã say that they learnt    how to extract industrial goods from the whites peacefully, and was reinforced    during the long process of 'pacification' initiated at the end of the 1920s.    From the Parakanã perspective, the agents of the State behaved like true fathers-givers    and thus subject to indigenous control (Fausto 2001a:469-531, 2002b, 2002c).    This is precisely the magic of the Parakanã dreamer: his shamanic potency (<i>ipajé</i>)    resides in his capacity to extract a voluntary action from dream enemies; a    form of magic similar, for example, to the decorated canoes made by <i>kula</i>    traders whose enchantment (Gell 1998) is intended to ensnare the recipient and    persuade him to release his most precious objects.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">There are other    Amazonian contexts in which mastery was also applied to the relation with white    people. This is the case of the Paumari, an Arawá-speaking people, for whom,    Bonilla writes (2007), all existents (animals, plants, objects) possess a human    form conceived as an owner-master. As is usual in Amazonia, the relation between    an owner and its species is conceived in the same way as the familiarization    of animals and the adoption of children. But there are also asymmetric relations    between different species, which are assimilated to the boss-employee relation    (Bonilla 2007:199-205).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">White people provide    a clear representation of this double condition of 'masters' and 'bosses,' to    the extent that the Paumari have borrowed a term from the Amazonian Língua Geral    to designate whites as a whole: <i>Jara</i>, 'owner.' The whites are masters    possessing a predatory power expressed in the capture of Paumari children, kept    in boxes like pet animals. The shamans must release these children as they do    in other cases of 'soul theft' (Bonilla 2007:87). But though white people appear    here as one more figure among the masters populating the non-human world, it    is not just the indigenous world that is projected onto the relation with the    colonizers: the indigenous model itself is inflected by the historical relations    of work and dependency. In the words of a former Paumari shaman: "The shaman    is the father of the <i>itavari </i>&#91;auxiliary spirit&#93;. He's like a governor.    Whatever the shaman tells him, he must do and obey, like an employee. The <i>itavari</i>    are keen to work and follow the shaman's orders since then they will be able    to come to the <i>ihinika </i>&#91;ritual&#93;" (Bonilla 2007:355).<a href="#_edn21" name="_ednref21" title=""><sup>21</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">As Bonilla suggests,    there is yet another twist to this tale since the model of adoption, inflected    by the boss-employee relation, was a way of using the asymmetric interaction    with whites to control the latter's predatory potential. The Paumari placed    themselves in the position of wild pets, trying to convert a predatory relation    into care and protection. The strategy of submission also contains a lure, since    it is a way of eliciting the action corresponding to the owner position, defined    as someone who looks after and feeds his children-pets (Bonilla 2005:58).<a href="#_edn22" name="_ednref22" title=""><sup>22</sup></a> The masters live in    a world of abundance &#151; they are bigger, richer and more fertile &#150; and people    expect that if they do not behave as predators, they will behave as providers.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The same resonance    between historical relations of power and exploration and the indigenous cosmology    is found among the Ávila Runa of Ecuador (Kohn 2002, 2007). Here the animal    masters express different figures of power and authority from the pre-colonial,    colonial and post-colonial past. The world in which they live is described as    an urban network with its own hierarchy: the main owners, <i>curagas</i>, live    in a kind of 'Quito in the Forest,' located within the Sumaco Volcano, linked    by roads to other smaller towns where less important owners live. Another image    employed to describe this world is that of the <i>haciendas</i> of the rubber    era with their bosses-owners and their domestic animals kept in corrals.<a href="#_edn23" name="_ednref23" title=""><sup>23</sup></a>    Both towns and <i>haciendas</i> are imagined as places of abundance in which    the most powerful masters walk around with jaguars by their side like pet dogs    (Kohn 2007:109-120).<a href="#_edn24" name="_ednref24" title=""><sup>24</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The mastery-ownership    relation is not only productive in terms of conceptualizing the asymmetries    between Indians and whites, or humans and non-humans. It is also a key to understanding    the asymmetric relations between indigenous peoples. I suggest that mastery-ownership    was an important sociological mechanism in the past, serving to structure hierarchical    relations between different indigenous groups, something still observable today    in some regional systems. This appears to be the case of the asymmetric relation    between the Maku people and the Tukanoan and Arawakan peoples on the Upper Rio    Negro (Ramos, Silverwood-Cope &amp; Oliveira 1980), or between the Guaná (Terena    and Kinikinau) and the Mbayá-Guaykuru (Kadiwéu), historical evidence of which    dates back to Ulrich Schmidel's voyage in the first half of the 16<sup>th</sup>    century (Cardoso de Oliveira 1976:31-2).<a href="#_edn25" name="_ednref25" title=""><sup>25</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">From the same period    comes the first information on the Chiriguano, a people formed by the violent    asymmetric fusion of the Guarani and Chané, the latter speakers of an Arawakan    language (Combès &amp; Saignes 1991). In the 16<sup>th</sup> century, the Chané    were literally cannibalized and incorporated in a subordinate position, to the    point of being defined as 'slaves' (<i>tapii</i>) to the Guarani, described    as 'masters' (<i>iya</i>) (Combès &amp; Lowrey 2006:692).<a href="#_edn26" name="_ednref26" title=""><sup>26</sup></a> However, from the 19<sup>th</sup>    century onwards, a group of Chané descent, the Izoceños, began to try to reverse    this asymmetry, proclaiming themselves, significantly, <i>Iyambae</i>: 'those-without-masters.'    This term, initially used as a surname by a dynasty of Izoceños chiefs, has    today been converted into a new ethnic marker, providing the names for a territory    called the 'land without owner' (<i>Ivi Iyambae</i>) and a homonymous foundation    (Combès 2005; Combès &amp; Villar 2005):</font></p>     <blockquote>       ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">For outsiders      to Izozog, it suggests freedom and equality; it can evoke &#91;…&#93; the 'society      against the state' scenario that Pierre Clastres (1982 &#91;1974&#93;), on the basis      of Guaraní examples, embedded in the expression. For Izoceño insiders, by      contrast, it takes on an establishmentarian cast. In Izozog, to be 'without      owner' is to occupy a particularly embedded social position that is materially      rewarding; to be 'without master' is to occupy the summit of an Arawakan hierarchy.      (Combès &amp; Lowrey 2006:700-701)</font></p> </blockquote>      <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">There is no space    here to discuss the nature of this hierarchy or its association with Arawakan    peoples (see Heckenberger 2002, Santos-Granero 2002). Neither is this the place    to ask whether, when, where and how these relations of ownership were converted    into relations of domination. For the purposes of this article, it is enough    to note the productivity and generality of the owner-master idiom.</font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="3"><b>Conclusion</b></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">We have seen how    the relation between mastery, conceived as an adoptive filiation, operates at    different scales ranging from the microconstitution of the person to the macroconstitution    of the cosmos. We have also seen that as a relational schema it defines interactions    in highly diverse spheres and between very distinct entities (humans, animals,    plants, spirits, artefacts). And, finally, we have observed the existence of    a dynamic in which this same schema is inflected by new historical situations.    But what, in sum, am I arguing?</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">In fact, the first    paragraph of this text already announced my intentions. It paraphrases a passage    from Lévi-Strauss's 1943 article "The Social Use of Kinship Terms among Brazilian    Indians," which inaugurated a whole school of Americanist thought on the brother-in-law    relationship, of which we are all heirs thanks to the works of various colleagues.<a href="#_edn27" name="_ednref27" title=""><sup>27</sup></a>    What I am suggesting, then, is that the relation of mastery operates, like symmetric    affinity, as a 'cosmological operator' (Viveiros de Castro 1993). If, as Viveiros    de Castro proposes, Amazonian sociocosmologies posit an 'affinity without affines'    (intensive and potential) they also posit a type of cosmopolitical and interspecific    filiation (a metafiliation) in which adoption rather than the vertical transmission    of substances is the crucial element.<a href="#_edn28" name="_ednref28" title=""><sup>28</sup></a> But could the same    not be said of other relational modalities, like asymmetric affinity (the father-in-law/son-in-law    relationship) or symmetric consanguinity (siblinghood)? Specific contexts aside,    these modes of relations do not reach the level of generality of the brother-in-law    relation and adoptive filiation. This is because they occupy the polar positions    of identity and difference, tending to slip either into the sterile fixity of    the same or into uncontrollable cannibal potency.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">In Amazonia, siblinghood,    particularly same-sex, is often taken to be the core of identity (Fausto 1991:72)    and limited to this domain. There is no meta-siblinghood as found in India or    universal brotherhood of the Christian kind. In Amazonia, siblinghood only connects    wider domains where religious conversions have taken place, especially to the    new Evangelism (Vilaça 1996). Whenever siblinghood emerges as a sociocosmic    idiom, an asymmetry based on birth order is introduced.<a href="#_edn29" name="_ednref29" title=""><sup>29</sup></a> This is the case of    the twin sagas analyzed by Lévi-Strauss (1991), as well as the myths on the    origin of the difference between Indians and white people, equated with an inversion    of seniority between brothers.<a href="#_edn30" name="_ednref30" title=""><sup>30</sup></a>    Birth order can also serve as a sociocosmic ruler for marking hierarchical differences    between segments of the same people, as occurs in the Upper Rio Negro system,    or between siblings descending from chiefs, as happens in the Upper Xingu. As    an identificatory relation, however, siblinghood does not constitute a generalized    cosmopolitical idiom, though the sibling group is a fundamental unit in the    structuration of the region's political dynamics.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The father-in-law/son-in-law    relation is found on the opposite pole to siblinghood, since it is constituted    on superimposed differences and asymmetries: the difference between wife-givers    and wife-takers and the difference between generations. The relation is overly    potent and quickly veers towards figures of power and cannibal voracity. Not    by chance, the two pre-eminent images of this relation in the regional literature    are the overworked son-in-law and the jaguar father-in-law, as suggested, for    example, in Yekuana myths in which the son-in-law has to carry out super-human    tasks to avoid being devoured by his cannibalistic father-in-law (Guss 1989:80,    94).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">As Turner (1979,    1991) and Rivière (1984, 1987) show, this is the only kinship relation in Amazonia    that involves the <i>substitution</i> of one person's work by another. The son-in-law    works for, or in the place of, the father-in-law: he must hunt, fish, clear    swiddens, build the house. This obligation derives from the fact of marriage    itself and there are few ways of evading it entirely, except by capturing spouses.    Even in the Upper Xingu, where bride wealth exists in certain situations, the    latter serves only to attenuate, not annul, the services provided to the father-in-law.    Rivière and Turner analyze this relation as a mechanism for controlling persons    with repercussions on the formation of leaders and on the autonomy of adult    men in general. Important variations exist in terms of its structural effects,    depending on whether the society is uxorilocal or virilocal, on whether the    rule of residence is mechanical or statistical, and on the length of bride-service.    Even so, it is likely that had they to identify one kinship relation involving    authority and control in indigenous Amazonia, nine out of ten specialists would    pick the relation between father-in-law and son-in-law.<a href="#_edn31" name="_ednref31" title=""><sup>31</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Nonetheless, it    does not provide a general idiom for schematizing relations as diverse as those    between shamans and auxiliary spirits, warriors and victims, captors and captives,    masters and pets &#150; despite the fact that, in Amazonia, the son-in-law's position    in an uxorilocal system is frequently compared to that of a captive enemy or    a pet animal. The lower generality of asymmetric affinity can be traced to the    fact that Amazonian masters are double-sided: they are voracious jaguars for    other peoples and protective fathers for their own. Fathers-in-law, on the contrary,    tend to be all jaguar. This does not mean that the relation cannot operate as    a cosmopolitical idiom under certain contexts. Tupi groups, with their cannibal    inclination, have always flirted with this possibility. Among the Araweté, for    example, asymmetric affinity schematizes the relation between the living and    the divinities, pervaded by the same positional ambivalence as other shamanic    relations (Viveiros de Castro 1992:218).</font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Before concluding,    it remains for us to incorporate sexual difference into the argument. There    are two cross-sex relations that seem to connect distinct sociocosmic domains:    maternity and matrimony. Maternity is a particular case of the mastery relation    in which the owner's genitor-function is foregrounded. This relation is expressed,    for instance, in the figures of the mothers of the game (or of a particular    species) or the mothers of plants (especially hallucinogens). However, these    entities are not widely distributed in Amazonia, nor does maternity apply to    a wide spectrum of relations as is the case of mastery.<a href="#_edn32" name="_ednref32" title=""><sup>32</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">By contrast, matrimony    is a more productive relation. In mythology it appears as a central mechanism    in the passage from one kinship situation to another. Interspecific marriages    are numerous in myths and very often eclipse the same-sex affinal relations    they necessarily imply. In addition, some indigenous peoples conceive the shaman's    relation with his auxiliary spirits as a matrimonial bond, and shamans may constitute    spirit families. The examples I know are concentrated in Western Amazonia, found    among the Shipibo-Conibo of Peru (D'Anglure &amp; Morin 1998), the Chimane of    Bolivia (Daillant 1998, 2003:308-313), the Achuar of Ecuador (Descola 1986:346-48,    Taylor 1993:437-439), the Harakmbut of Peru (Califano 1988:117-119), the Wari'    of Rondônia (Vilaça 2006:202-203) and the Nambikwara-Mamaindê of Mato Grosso,    both in Brazil (Miller 2007:198-200).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Matrimony dynamically    expresses a set of kinship relations, since the shaman constitutes actual spirit    families: he has a wife and affines, and engenders spirit-children. Even in    these cases, however, there seems to be on one hand an emphasis of paternity    &#150; a man begins his shamanic life as a husband and ends up as a father, a bond    conceived to be more stable and secure (D'Anglure &amp; Morin 1998:67; Daillant    2003:313) ­&#150; and on the other hand, a relative de-emphasis of affinity.<a href="#_edn33" name="_ednref33" title=""><sup>33</sup></a> It is as though matrimony    itself converges towards adoption rather than alliance, in contrast to what    occurs, according to Hamayon (1990), in Siberian hunting shamanism.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The Nambikwara-Mamaindê    provide us with the most suggestive example of this assimilation of marriage    and familiarization (Fausto 2001b). The spirit-wife, a jaguar, is denominated<i>    mãindu </i>('my fosterling' or 'my wild pet') by the shaman-husband. As would    be expected, we can also observe here the positional instability that marks    the relations between shamans and auxiliary spirits in general: "it is never    known for certain who is 'fostering' whom. Although the shaman calls his spirit-wife    'my fosterling,' by sharing food and body decorations with her, the shaman indicates    that it is he who is being 'fostered' by her" (Miller 2007:199).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">In sum, none of    the relations analyzed above seems to have the same degree of generality in    Amazonia as symmetric affinity and asymmetric consanguinity. The first combines    difference and symmetry; the second, identity and asymmetry. The overlapping    of new differences (of gender or generation) is less operative and is limited    in terms of both ethnic and spatial distribution, as well as sociocosmic domains.    Meta-affinity and meta-filiation are both elective, dispensing with any other    prior relation: one can be an enemy/brother-in-law of anyone, just as one can    adopt any enemy one wishes. We are not talking about just any adoptive filiation,    though, or just any brother-in-law relation. The latter, in its intensive modality    (potential affinity), is a figure of enmity, while the former is a figure of    ownership, of the asymmetric relation between the owner-master and his children-pets.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">There is a final    point I wish to make: adoption is, so to speak, an <i>incomplete</i> filiation.    It does not produce full identity but an ambivalent relation in which the substrate    of enmity is obviated, yet not entirely neutralized. Hence my emphasis on the    persistence of the other's perspective in the shaman-auxiliary spirit or killer-victim    relationship. This may explain why captives, orphans and pet animals often receive    treatment that veers between care and cruelty. The master's double face is matched    by the pet's wildness: the latter is an other and will never cease to be so    entirely.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">To finish, I once    more paraphrase Claude Lévi-Strauss (1943:409): a sufficient number of convergent    indications have been recorded so that we may consider the outstanding character    of the mastery relationship a specific feature of Amerindian sociocosmology,    configuring a world of owners <i>and</i> enemies, but not necessarily one of    domination and private ownership.</font></p> <font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><b><br clear=all> </b> </font>      <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="3"><b>Notes</b></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><a href="#_ednref1" name="_edn1" title=""><sup>1</sup></a> I have been writing this text in my head    for years. Some of its ideas have been presented on my courses in Brazil, as    well as in a seminar at EHESS, in 2005, run by Carlo Severi, whom I thank for    the invitation. I also thank Marina Velasco and Federico Neiburg for the opportunity    of studying Locke on a course that we gave together in 2004. My thanks to Marc    Brightman, Vanessa Grotti and Olga Ulturgasheva for inviting me present this    text in the conference "Humains, animaux, plantes et choses: la notion de personne    en Amazonie et Sibérie contemporaines," at the Musée du Quai Branly, in 2008.    Finally, I am grateful for the reading and comments of Aparecida Vilaça, Cesar    Gordon, Federico Neiburg, Marina Velasco, Marnio Teixeira-Pinto and in particular    Luiz Costa, with whom I have maintained an intense dialogue on the theme.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><a href="#_ednref2" name="_edn2" title=""><sup>2</sup></a> Yawalapiti is a southern Arawak language.    The cognates of <i>wököti</i> in the region are the Mehinaku <i>wekehe</i> (Gregor    1977) and the Wauja <i>wekehö</i> (Barcelos Neto 2004). For a discussion of    owners and ownership among the Arawak of the Upper Xingu, see Ball (2007).</font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><a href="#_ednref3" name="_edn3" title=""><sup>3</sup></a> This synonymy of body and owner is unusual.    As far as I know, it is also found among the Bakairi (Collet 2006:150-154) and    the Chimane (Daillant pers. comm.). For an interesting discussion of the Bakairi    notion of owner (<i>sodo</i>) as a mediator between individuals and collectivities,    see Collet (2006:153).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><a href="#_ednref4" name="_edn4" title=""><sup>4</sup></a> I employ the concept of singularity to    designate an internally multiple and non-self-identical unity, following its    contemporary usage, inspired by Deleuze (1968). Sometimes I also use the composite    expression 'plural singularity.' As Viveiros de Castro points out (2007), in    anthropology the concept has resonances with the proposals of Strathern (1988,    1992) and Wagner (1991) for redefining the relation between part/whole, particular/collective    at different scales from the microconstitution of the person to the macroconstitution    of the social. Though I cannot develop the point here, it is important to note    that the type of sovereignty implied by the Amazonian notion of 'owner' differs    from that implied by our own concept of political body; in other words, the    chief-owner-body is not a Leviathan.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><a href="#_ednref5" name="_edn5" title=""><sup>5</sup></a> See, especially, Fausto (2001), as well    as the articles by Erikson (1987, 2000) and Descola (1994) on which this argument    is based. In relation to shamanism, see Albert on the Yanomami (1985:316), Bonilla    on the Paumari (2007:355), Briggs on the Warao (1994:141-142), Chaumeil on the    Yágua (1983:120), Costa on the Kanamari (2007:49), Henry on the southern Gê    (1964:73) and Wagley on the Tapirapé (1976:242). In relation to warfare and    trophy rituals, see Menget on the Ikpeng (1988:67), Santos-Granero on the Conibo    (2005:156-157), Sterpin on the Nivakle (1993:42) and Taylor on the Jívaro (1994).    In relation to ceremonial objects, see Staden on Tupinambá maraca rattles (2008&#91;1557&#93;:125),    Menget on Ikpeng flutes (1988), Hugh-Jones on Barasana body adornments and musical    instruments (1996:141) and Maia Figueiredo (2009) on the Jurupari flutes made    by the Baré.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><a href="#_ednref6" name="_edn6" title=""><sup>6</sup></a> I am unable to discuss here the quality    of this 'care,' a central theme in the works of Overing Kaplan (1999), inspired    by the moral philosophy of virtues (MacIntyre 1981, Larrabee 1993, Baier 1994).    </font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><a href="#_ednref7" name="_edn7" title=""><sup>7</sup></a> The term <i>iamït</i> applies to the animals    controlled by masters, to the pets raised by humans and to adopted orphans (Teixeira-Pinto    1997:314).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><a href="#_ednref8" name="_edn8" title=""><sup>8</sup></a> Analyzing ayahuasca visions and the foetus-placenta    relation among the Piro, Gow (1999:237) likens this typology to that of a Klein    bottle in which the inside is simultaneously the outside of the recipient.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><a href="#_ednref9" name="_edn9" title=""><sup>9</sup></a> The reification of the chief-form, which    makes him the singular image of an owner-master, also makes him something that    belongs to the community: "Persons are owned as things through a political-ritual    fabrication that presents the person being claimed by another as singular, entire    and <i>whole</i> &#91;...&#93;" (Strathern 2005:120). Entire and whole, but simultaneously    singular and plural, since here the individual is not opposed to the collectivity:    "for whether we see a man or a clan is in one sense irrelevant: collective action    aggrandises each man's performance but is no different in kind from his own    aggrandisement as a single person" (Strathern 1999:37).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><a href="#_ednref10" name="_edn10" title=""><sup>10</sup></a> As I tried to show, this prey/predator    split is an essential element in the constitution of the person in Amazonia    (Fausto 2002a, 2007; Taylor 2000). For a different but consonant formulation,    see Gordon's analysis (2006:217-218) of the Xikrin categories <i>àkrê</i> (described    as a capacity for <i>self</i>-subjectification and <i>other</i>-objectification)    and <i>uabô</i> (described as a capacity for <i>self</i>-objectification and    <i>other</i>-subjectification).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><a href="#_ednref11" name="_edn11" title=""><sup>11</sup></a> Even in the case of Locke, I focus only    on the <i>Second Treatise of Government</i> and chapter XXVII, Book 2, of <i>An    Essay Concerning Human Understanding</i>. Locke's work contains another model    of the person, described as a passive repository of capacities, that pervades    his ideas on education, especially of labourers (Tully 1993a:88). It should    also be noted that Locke's notion of the individual as an owner of his/her self    (and, therefore, as a non-slave) can be traced back to a long tradition of Roman    law, which is taken up by Grotius, Hobbes and the Levellers, before Locke (Tully    1993b).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><a href="#_ednref12" name="_edn12" title=""><sup>12</sup></a> Unsurprisingly the argument has baffled    some commentators. Lloyd Thomas, for example, considers Locke's premise absurd,    since it is based on the idea that the mixture of bodily secretions with things    adds something to the latter that nature did not provide them: " 'labour' cannot    be mixed with the substances things are made of" (Lloyd Thomas 1995:109). From    an anthropological perspective, on the contrary, the argument encounters numerous    ethnographic resonances.</font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><a href="#_ednref13" name="_edn13" title=""><sup>13</sup></a> The first rupture that begins the narrative    occurs between assymetric brothers-in-law: the abandoned brother-in-law is the    wife's younger brother, i.e., an unmarried man still living in his parents'    house to which his sister's husband moved. There is a homology between the latter's    isolation from his birth house and the isolation of the young brother-in-law    left on the cliff or on the top of a tree.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><a href="#_ednref14" name="_edn14" title=""><sup>14</sup></a> This expression was used to explain to    me why the old school had been practically abandoned by 1998, even though the    Kuikuro consider school education to be extremely important. Any researcher    who has tried to give something 'in common' to an indigenous people must have    faced an impasse, since everything always has an owner. Today among the Kuikuro    with the proliferation of commercially valuable objects, a distinction is marked    between what belongs to the <i>comunidade</i> ('community') and what is 'particular'    &#150; two Portuguese terms that are interspersed in Kuikuro phrases. 'Community'    objects are those belonging to the chief without being his private property.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><a href="#_ednref15" name="_edn15" title=""><sup>15</sup></a> From which Balibar concludes, with a    certain irony, that the notion of identity as that which 'differs from the different'    was not a discovery of the Hegelian dialectic.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><a href="#_ednref16" name="_edn16" title=""><sup>16</sup></a> A more rigorous exposition of the differences    between our philosophical alternatives and indigenous cosmologies eludes the    objectives of this text. It would require us to consider other Western philosopical    models of personal identity that, in contrast to Locke, are not based on the    equation between <i>ipse</i> (self) and <i>idem</i> (same).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><a href="#_ednref17" name="_edn17" title=""><sup>17</sup></a> I refer above all to <i>Society Against    the State</i> in which 'primitive society' appears as a kind of Gulagian nightmare    (pictured as a dream) "from which nothing escapes &#91;…&#93; since all exits are closed."    (Clastres 1978:147-148).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><a href="#_ednref18" name="_edn18" title=""><sup>18</sup></a> Among the Yanomami, warriors about to    leave on a war expedition underwent a ritual to absorb a vulture-image, necessary    for digestion of the future victim (Albert 1985:363), while Wayana men were    scarified with jaguar or bird-of-prey patterns to instil them with the predatory    disposition needed for success (van Velthem 2003:354).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><a href="#_ednref19" name="_edn19" title=""><sup>19</sup></a> The mapping of the Kanamari structure    onto the region's hydrography &#150; in which the largest river is the -<i>warah</i>,    which contains its affluents, which, in turn, contain their own affluents, and    so on &#150; also echoes the hierarchical structure of the rubber economy. On the    relationship between this cartography and shamanism, see Gow (1994) and Carneiro    da Cunha (1998).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><a href="#_ednref20" name="_edn20" title=""><sup>20</sup></a> Following the submission to State administration    in the 1980s, the Parakanã began to address white people by the vocative <i>wepajé</i>,    'my ritual-friend,' a term with connotations of affinity and enmity. On this    term, see Fausto (1995:75-78; 2001:285-297).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><a href="#_ednref21" name="_edn21" title=""><sup>21</sup></a> <i>Ihinika</i> is a ritual in which children    are captured by the human-part of foods and later rescued by shamans (Bonilla    2007:14).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><a href="#_ednref22" name="_edn22" title=""><sup>22</sup></a> This strategy, in which a subject looks    to place him or herself under the protection of a master and extract an action    from him, also characterizes the affective language of interpersonal relations    among the Candoshi, for whom "the paradigm of familiarization comprises &#91;...&#93;    the conceptual basis of all affective relations within the family" (Surrallès    2003:69). Among the Toba of the Chaco, the language of submission is designed    to elicit the compassion and generosity of the spirits-masters (Tola 2006).</font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><a href="#_ednref23" name="_edn23" title=""><sup>23</sup></a> This same image appears among the Chimane    for whom the master is an owner who possesses pet animals and people in his    service. The figure is frequently compared to the Bolivian farmers with their    cattle and cowboys (Daillant 2003:310, 317).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><a href="#_ednref24" name="_edn24" title=""><sup>24</sup></a> The association between dog and jaguar,    including at a lexical level, occurs in some parts of the Americas and is not    merely derived from their morphological and behavioural similarity (many of    the dogs of the Conquistadors were large hunting dogs): it also reflects the    status of canines as a ferocious domesticated animal under the control of an    owner, which enabled them to be associated with the (invisible) jaguars familiarized    by shamans and warriors.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><a href="#_ednref25" name="_edn25" title=""><sup>25</sup></a> The relation of dependency and protection    between these peoples contrasts with the violence of the Guaikuru against the    Guaxi, Guató and Chamacoco, indicating that the Guaná tried to control predation    through submission, just as the Paumari did in relation to the whites.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><a href="#_ednref26" name="_edn26" title=""><sup>26</sup></a> The translation of <i>tapii</i> as 'slave'    should be considered carefully (see Combès 2005:60-68). Among the coastal Tupi,    the term designated the non-Tupi Indians, but did not indicate a relation of    submission, as appears to have happened in the Chiriguano case. For a survey    of the theme of slavery and other forms of subordination among indigenous peoples,    see Santos-Granero (2005; 2008).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><a href="#_ednref27" name="_edn27" title=""><sup>27</sup></a> See, above all, the innovative synthesis    produced by Viveiros de Castro (1993), built on the works of Rivière (1969,    1984), Overing Kaplan (1975, 1984), Basso (1975), Menget (1977), Carneiro da    Cunha (1978), Taylor (1983, 1985, 1989), Albert (1985) and Erikson (1986), among    others. Also see the subsequent works of Descola (1993, 2001) and Taylor (2000).    For a discussion of the inaugural nature of Lévi-Strauss's article, see Coelho    de Souza &amp; Fausto (2004).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><a href="#_ednref28" name="_edn28" title=""><sup>28</sup></a> I use the prefix <i>meta</i>- in the    sense given by Taylor (2000:312) who, in turn, takes the expression from Jamous    (1991) on meta-siblinghood in India (see also Dumont 1975).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><a href="#_ednref29" name="_edn29" title=""><sup>29</sup></a> The only exception that comes to mind    is the relation of the Guajá person with his or her homonym (animal, plant,    artefact), a relation conceived as siblinghood (Cormier 2003:91).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><a href="#_ednref30" name="_edn30" title=""><sup>30</sup></a> See, for instance, the Barasana myth    analyzed by Hugh-Jones (1988:143-44), or the 17<sup>th</sup> century Tupinambá    version recounted by Abbeville (1975 &#91;1614&#93;:251-2).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><a href="#_ednref31" name="_edn31" title=""><sup>31</sup></a> For a re-reading of the theme of control    and leadership in the Guianese case, including a discussion of the notion of    ownership, see Brightman (2007). For a general hypothesis on the structural    effects of marriage in bride-service societies, see Collier &amp; Rosaldo (1981).    For a critical analysis of this hypothesis in the Melanesian context, see Kelly    (1993:415-525), and in the Amazonian context, Fausto (2001a:201-210).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><a href="#_ednref32" name="_edn32" title=""><sup>32</sup></a> Some caution is needed in relation to    the translations. For example, the 'mother of the peccary' among the Munduruku    (Murphy 1958), or the 'mothers of the game' among the Achuar (Descola 1986:317)    are effectively called 'mother' in the indigenous language. However, the regional    Spanish translation of the Yágua term <i>hamwo</i> or the Arakambut term <i>wachipai</i>    as 'madre' is equivocal, since these terms have another meaning in these languages    (Chaumeil 1983:74; Gray 1997:53).</font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><a href="#_ednref33" name="_edn33" title=""><sup>33</sup></a> In the Chimane case, Daillant claims    that not all shamans "know their wives' true brothers" (2003:325). The relation    with the father-in-law also seems to be unmarked, since the shaman's spiritual    relatives intercede with the masters of the animals, who, for their part, are    conceived as grandfathers of humans. The Nambikwara claim that on marrying a    spirit-woman, "the shaman becomes accompanied by the spirits of the dead &#91;...&#93;,    to whom he refers as 'my kin,' 'my people' (<i>da waintãdu</i>), a term that    connotes multiplicity and can be translated as 'my many'." (Miller 2007:200).</font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="3"><b>Bibliography</b></font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica-Normal, sans-serif" size="2">ALBERT, Bruce. 1985. 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