Abstract
The social organization of Eastern Tukanoan peoples in the Northwest Amazon region shows a dual tendency toward egalitarian and hierarchical relationships. This paper provides new data on the neighboring Northern Arawakan peoples of the Isana and Guainía rivers. It explores the equality‐versus‐hierarchy contrast as a pair of distinct, yet interconnected, modes of structuring that create adaptive flexibility in response to extreme seasonal fluctuations of basic riverine resources.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
HILL, J. D. (1984). social equality and ritual hierarchy: the Arawakan Wakuénai of Venezuela. American Ethnologist, 11(3), 528–544. https://doi.org/10.1525/ae.1984.11.3.02a00070
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