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The Central Arawaks

A vivid portrait of a threatened culture, by the first ethnologist to document indigenous tribes in the northern Amazon basin.

William Curtis Farabee (Author)

9781108006248, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 26 November 2009

344 pages
24.4 x 17 x 1.8 cm, 0.55 kg

In 1913, ethnologist and explorer William Curtis Farabee set out to document the Arawak tribes of northern Brazil and southern British Guiana, a three-year journey that led him far into the unmapped regions of the Amazon River basin. His meticulous observations comprise The Central Arawaks, first published in 1918 and still one of the most comprehensive accounts of the peoples living along the northern tributaries of the Amazon River. The Wapisiana, Ataroi, Taruma, and Mapidian tribes numbered fewer than 1,500 at the time of Farabee's voyage; his detailed record of their daily life preserves a vision of these vulnerable cultures at a crucial point in their history, offering insight into their languages, social structures, and cosmologies. A testament to an ethnologist whose achievements were once hailed as 'monumental', this reissued edition also brings renewed attention to William Farabee, whose influence on Anglo-American anthropological exploration is still felt today.

Preface
1. Geographical environment
2. The Wapisianas
3. Atarois
4. Tarumas
5. Mapidians
6. Destruction of the Cilikunas
7. The Nikarikaru
8. White Indians
9. Tribes of women
10. Petroglyphs
11. Bibliography.

Subject Areas: Anthropology [JHM]

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